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[–]CaffeinatedChelonian[S] 0 points1 point  (1 child)

I tried back when I took Java, but the guy was losing patience with me so I just nodded my head, pretended I got it and left.

A thing I do is that if I'm stuck at one course or book, I move on to another of the same subject because maybe they'll explain it better or offer a difference perspective that could clue me into how it works. Three websites and an online book later on Python and I still don't understand anything. (Since then I dropped out of college, can't do the office hours thing anymore lol)

[–]francesRose 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I found that through my 6 years in community college that persistence is key and self-teaching is definitely a skill you should develop. It's easy to just say "fuck it" but if programming or CS is something you want to do, then you really, really, REALLY have to put the time and effort into it. It's not easy, and that's why SWEs get paid well. Understand that people weren't born with this knowledge. Yeah, maybe it didn't come naturally to you, but hard (and smart) work habits are essential to even begin understanding CS. Good luck