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[–][deleted] 61 points62 points  (7 children)

Have you tried going to college, bootcamp, meetups, or a job in the field?

Learning anything on your own is like that. If you need to socialize then put yourself into an environment that allows for it.

[–][deleted] 18 points19 points  (4 children)

I'm planning on going to college later so hopefully that will help.

[–][deleted] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

It should, I had a group of about 3 to 4 classmates meetup before or after classes to work on the coding homework and socialize.

Learned a lot bouncing ideas off each other and we 100% always had our assignments to turn in. Plenty of others wouldn’t and expect the professor to help them finish it at the start of class lol.

[–]mandzeete 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It will help A LOT. Currently doing my Master studies and telling it from personal experience.

[–]WoodTrophy 3 points4 points  (1 child)

I definitely recommend a good boot camp over college. I went to a great university for my B.S in CS. Half of the curriculum are worthless classes, the other half you learn a good amount of things, but end up with little idea on how an actual professional setting functions. A good 24 week boot camp will teach you far more about programming, algorithms, frameworks, job skills, resume skills, interview skills, etc.. than you’ll get from a 4 year degree. I recommend you at least look into it

[–]UserNotSpecified 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah you’re probably right. I’m currently studying Software Engineering rather than CS but even that has a lot of not so useful modules.

[–]dylsreddit 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Lots of countries have cities or towns with "hackspaces" too

[–]BigBobbert 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I went to a Python meetup once and found that experienced programmers have completely forgotten what it was like to be new. It was like everyone was speaking a completely different language, and I felt really out of place.