3 Types of Projects That Will Make You a Programmer

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  • Опубліковано 12 гру 2021
  • Deciding which type of project you should add to your portfolio can be one of the hardest decisions to make. With so many options available; what should you do?
    In this video I lay out the 3 types of projects you'll want to build where I explain the importance of certain types of projects and I also provide examples that you can start working on today.
    🏆 * Coaching Program *
    Interested in joining my paid coaching program and getting support to get your software development career started? If you consider yourself an action-taker, you're ready to invest in your career and you're committed to putting in the work then book your intake call at andysterkowitz.com/assessment...
    List of Example Projects for Every Type Mentioned in Video:
    github.com/andysterks/three-l...
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 528

  • @bedtimestories1065
    @bedtimestories1065 2 роки тому +716

    As a professional dev, I miss these days sometimes... Learning software development via building anything I wanted was such a blast after school.

    • @rorymax
      @rorymax Рік тому +39

      the way you say this makes it sound like you don’t get to build whatever you want 🥺🥺 you still have fun making things right? 🥺🥺

    • @EternalNico1
      @EternalNico1 Рік тому

      then do it

    • @bedtimestories1065
      @bedtimestories1065 Рік тому +90

      @@rorymax Not what I meant. Working in the industry only made me like web development less, I still love programming. I was referring to nostalgia. Learning the complexity of programming was such a frustrating but rewarding process. Plus, I learned as a kid during middle and high school and we all have childhood/teenage memories that seem happier than they probably were. That's all, I still get to do really cool stuff :)

    • @jan5504
      @jan5504 Рік тому +10

      @@bedtimestories1065 I get what you mean, It's like when you first trying to get that girl's attention it feel so exciting until you and that girl became couple and found out than you don't really like her, it became a little bit boring, not generalizing every couple out there though.

    • @olivierraymond3802
      @olivierraymond3802 Рік тому +53

      @@jan5504 bro you've got issues lol

  • @meqdaddev4341
    @meqdaddev4341 2 роки тому +102

    Great categorization.
    I think we can add another level after capstone level, which is 'Solving Real Problems'
    Which means that if someone worked on a clone project, he/she can work on some customization for this project to deliver it as a real solution for some potential customers, even for free to get some good experience in CV.
    For instance, an e-commerce clone project can be customized for a local grocery in the neighborhood.

  • @Elle--lc7ep
    @Elle--lc7ep Рік тому +16

    This video earned my subscription! Great job breaking it down and giving direction and concrete examples on where to start, what a roadmap from "easy" to "highly complex" projects looks like, and benchmarks to check your progress! Keep up the good work!

  • @jennifermckeithen1498
    @jennifermckeithen1498 2 роки тому +10

    Thanks so much for breaking this down! It's taken me months just to get a straight answer to this question - much appreciated!!

  • @BronkoBanane
    @BronkoBanane 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge! I liked the idea to mesure the complexity of a project by its functionalitys. Thats an objective criteria everybody would agree with.

  • @emiyox8885
    @emiyox8885 2 роки тому +71

    Informative video, my personal opinion is that once you go past the simple projects it is better to develop fewer projects while going very in--depth than trying to create many different ones. By in-depth I don't mean a large scope and a billion features, but take your time to think about the architecture and perhaps educate yourself with design patterns and see if you can fit at least one in. Most importantly, DO take your time to go over best practices to do certain things, even if it's something you can already code blindly - go and check how it can be done in different way, look over common approaches and see which ones you want to adopt.
    Understanding design and best practices is super important especially if you are going to try and land a job in the future - and when you do talk about your experiences dont mention your To Do List, it doesn't have to be a capstone project as long as we have taken the time to learn design/best practices in an intermediate project so you can elaborate further.
    Good luck.

  • @sergiomendoza6833
    @sergiomendoza6833 2 роки тому

    Thanks for the break down and for the link to list many examples that helped a lot

  • @johnterpack3940
    @johnterpack3940 Рік тому +14

    This was genuinely helpful. Defining the tiers like you did really makes sense. Now I know to look for projects that don't require libraries, focus on the syntax. Then once I'm comfortable with that, move on to using libraries to do bigger things. Of course, I want to learn Rust. And my understanding at this point is that almost anything beyond printing a line requires a library of some sort.

  • @GarimellaProduction
    @GarimellaProduction 2 роки тому

    This breakdown of projects helps. Thank you for this video .

  • @rksmiths2773
    @rksmiths2773 2 роки тому

    Thanks for putting this video Andy, was very helpful.

  • @ibrahimtejera7456
    @ibrahimtejera7456 2 роки тому +2

    Thanks Andy. Great advice. This helps me a lot. Im a beginner in web develepment and I am trying to land my first job.

  • @hoquang1386
    @hoquang1386 2 роки тому +70

    Thanks Andy. You're very inspirational to me.
    In my case, I've only built one single capstone project which take me a lot of time and effort, but it's all worth it. Now I'm working as a full time developer.

  • @bigunhettiarachchi853
    @bigunhettiarachchi853 Рік тому +2

    The best advice I received on how to select projects based on knowledge and experience.
    Thanks dude

  • @TheCamelBug
    @TheCamelBug 2 роки тому +5

    Thanks for the tips Andy! Very handy ones!!!

  • @AlexLaxer4
    @AlexLaxer4 2 роки тому +7

    Can we give a round of a applause for this good info?! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @jeevanramesh9193
    @jeevanramesh9193 2 роки тому +8

    Been watching a lot of your videos from my homepage the past few weeks. Great content bro. Subscribed

  • @sam.shock924
    @sam.shock924 2 роки тому +12

    yet another phenomenal, informative video! love seeing these pop up in my feed :)

  • @inchy9401
    @inchy9401 2 роки тому +5

    Thanks Andy, i now realise what I’ve been doing wrong all this time, I will start these apps immediately (thank goodness you published this video).

  • @Mint-nt6ly
    @Mint-nt6ly 10 місяців тому

    Thank you so much! This video brings more clarity I really needed

  • @Skillamu
    @Skillamu Рік тому

    Great video! This was the exact video i needed and was looking for, thank you so much!

  • @thearchi-tech9693
    @thearchi-tech9693 2 роки тому

    This was very helpful, thank you so much!

  • @_Anna_Nass_
    @_Anna_Nass_ Рік тому

    This is really good and answered a lot of questions I had. Thank you.

  • @dequan300
    @dequan300 9 місяців тому +2

    This helped me out so much I've done 10 low level projects and I feel so much more confident gaining a strong foundation . I'm now moving on to intermittent projects.

  • @Jester2b04
    @Jester2b04 2 роки тому

    Excellent breakdown of the different types of projects to make while learning Wed Dev.

  • @livewithmeinegypt307
    @livewithmeinegypt307 Рік тому

    Thanks for this too the point vid. Your the first person who has done this.it really helped me thank you soo much . I subscribed aswel .thanks bro

  • @washburnlane
    @washburnlane Рік тому

    Dude, seriously, top shelf presentation, thanks!! 👊😎

  • @bobbysilver272
    @bobbysilver272 2 роки тому +737

    Becoming a paid "programmer" seems so complicated. It seems like one has to know SO much to just get a job. This isn't the case in many other careers.

    • @scroopynoopers9824
      @scroopynoopers9824 Рік тому +147

      @Gooby123 true, but apparently it's worth it when you get in. Keep in my mind, the supply does not meet the demand! That's one of the reasons it pays so well.

    • @liammorrison4284
      @liammorrison4284 Рік тому +89

      I think sometimes a lot of people down play this aspect of getting hired as a programmer. For me, coming from IT it was easier to build on the knowledge I already had working with computers and other people in the tech world. But even then, I’m 6 months into my job as a web developer and still feel like there’s a ton of stuff I don’t know. I can only imagine what it would be like for someone coming from a different field and trying to fit in with a development team and not feel out of place.

    • @tichalagaming7853
      @tichalagaming7853 Рік тому +16

      Highly disagree

    • @bobbysilver272
      @bobbysilver272 Рік тому +19

      @@tichalagaming7853 OK, but why?

    • @jadengordon6648
      @jadengordon6648 Рік тому +7

      @@tichalagaming7853 what’s your tips/POV?

  • @fahimtoufiqulislam9264
    @fahimtoufiqulislam9264 Рік тому

    Thank you for the this video. People just starting out usually lack direction. Horrible situation to get out of. This helps

  • @RJ-gh3lg
    @RJ-gh3lg 2 роки тому +1

    I really needed this man thank you so much I've been stuck for a year, idk what to do as a beginner. I don't know what projects to make.

  • @GaborGubicza
    @GaborGubicza 7 місяців тому +1

    Thanks Andy for the great video, I'm a Hardware engineer with a lot of PCB design experience, and decided to switch my career to software. I'm in week 2 the exploration phase. Keep up the good work!

  • @gold4963
    @gold4963 2 роки тому +7

    This is exactly the video I needed; thanks!

  • @Atom-Mercury
    @Atom-Mercury 11 місяців тому

    That's the best video on that subject. Thank you kindly.

  • @soorigh4132
    @soorigh4132 2 роки тому +2

    I needed it. Thanks for sharing.

  • @priyanshujain22f
    @priyanshujain22f 8 місяців тому +1

    Made 1 capstone and 3 projects between Intermediate and Capstone.
    Thank you for this video Andy

  • @maurolimaok
    @maurolimaok 2 роки тому

    This video will be very useful for me in a couple of months. Thanks!

  • @pokeripper9707
    @pokeripper9707 2 роки тому +378

    I got my fist job as software engineer just a month ago, without a degree, but I am working with it for over 10 years now.
    I had 2!!! projects wich gave me the job, so that is really the sweet spot if you ask me.
    But 1 tip if you really want to get a job, don't just build a "test project" but try to make something usefull.
    my first project was some small administration software for the company i worked for. I told the owner i wanted to create it for free to test my skills, and if it would be usefull he could use it. now its being used for 2 years and it's perfect for your portfolio.
    project 2 was a webshop for myself, just to test my skills, not for profit. after 1 month of developing i had a live webshop wich solds way more products then expected.
    these 2 projects gave me the first job as software developer. but please don't just make test projects, try to make them work as if they are going to be used. you won't regret it!

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  2 роки тому +38

      Congrats on landing that first gig!

    • @leoMC4384
      @leoMC4384 2 роки тому +10

      I've been learning on my own for almost 2 years. I created a mobile app for tracking packages for e-commerce and all that, and now I'm doing a web app for the employees of the company I work for (private security). But I want to quit a be a developer full time for other company. Still I feel like I don't know enough to be hired as a developer. 😑

    • @brahmabull4004
      @brahmabull4004 2 роки тому +8

      everyone, follow this guy's example.

    • @abhinandc6896
      @abhinandc6896 2 роки тому

      Can you share your projects

    • @osassabi2202
      @osassabi2202 2 роки тому +3

      @@leoMC4384 you most certainly do my friend. I got my first gig with less knowledge than you, from what you’ve said. If you can, go for it!

  • @KrisAkaVenno
    @KrisAkaVenno 2 роки тому +484

    I think the capstone projects really improve skills, I have done like a few and every time I am finishing I look at the code I have written in previous project and want to improve/refactor it - because I have learned something as a programmer
    (unfortunately my perfectionism and sometimes laziness stop me from finishing fully a project)

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  2 роки тому +45

      They are the hardest to finish by far. The last 10% is so tedious to go through but it's the part that we of the app where we are weakest in knowledge/understanding (so it's important to get through).

    • @pokeripper9707
      @pokeripper9707 2 роки тому +38

      perfectionism can be a problem for developers, i haven't finished a lot of projects because of this.
      what i've learned is to just release projects even if they are not 100% finished. then with input from your users you can make it perfect along the way.

    • @chieftron
      @chieftron 2 роки тому +1

      @Alek Wolf Are we living the same life? lol.

    • @MrPatrickbuit
      @MrPatrickbuit 2 роки тому +1

      @Alek Wolf This could have been my comment

    • @theRealJonSherman
      @theRealJonSherman Рік тому

      same lol

  • @AliSiHosseini
    @AliSiHosseini Рік тому

    very useful video and this is what I am looking for in the last while, keep on posting such great videos.

  • @Alkis05
    @Alkis05 2 роки тому +18

    For my micro controller class, I did a breakout game. Not only the game, but also showing it on a display (those small nokia ones) and programming the controls in a matrix pad.

  • @thesunryze4658
    @thesunryze4658 Рік тому +17

    This is pretty encouraging.
    I'm a fresh (24yo) IT networking technician with just a little bit of dev background "for fun", but mostly overall IT basic stuff knowledge.
    I got into a new job 4 months ago.
    I'm doing very well and I'm now in charge of many tasks that aren't supposed to be technician level, like managing my company's active directory (users, GPO, DNS and whatnot).
    I kept asking for more and more responsabilities and projects because I thrive to learn more and I was put in charge to create an application to automate the search, creation and modification of AD Users in the AD, including creating custom proprieties on the user objects do that we can use it with PowerBI to do some data analysis.
    I just finished it today after 2 weeks of work, 3 versions of the program.
    ~650 lines written in Powershell with a user friendly UI, the ability to filter users in the AD by any propriety (name, OU, groups, IpPhone, Location etc...) and other cool features, IMO.
    All of that said because this project rly sparked my interest for programming again and here I am looking for projects on my free time.
    Now that I got my basics covered in Powershell (already know SQL, AutoIT, C and a tiny bit of php, css, html as well) I think I wanna get started with Python and JS and some of your projects definitely spark my interest and ticking tgose boxes.Thanks for this awesome video!

    • @Juliansantos61
      @Juliansantos61 10 місяців тому +1

      Sounds like you already have the skills to be working as a top paid engineer. Hope you are been well compensated.

  • @juanrossi3
    @juanrossi3 2 роки тому +1

    Great advice! Thanks!

  • @JasonSmith-ir8zz
    @JasonSmith-ir8zz 2 роки тому

    Wow this was a really good video! Thanks bro.

  • @walliswilliams394
    @walliswilliams394 Рік тому

    Great information. Thank you!

  • @jsmassinemassine1912
    @jsmassinemassine1912 Рік тому

    thanks you man your advices is in the right time

  • @victorvondoom2350
    @victorvondoom2350 Рік тому +6

    it's such a nostalgia to remember how i felt when i first began programming . This channels been inspirational . it was all rinse and reapeat and once fundamentals were cleared i had to build common sense in the art of coding , i finally reached the stage of learning mid fundamentals , most projects after that was just googling and copy and paste others code that you do really have grain understanding .
    Oh yea! really loved the tetris portfolio, built one myself it was not easy honestly, took me months to understand the concepts ,
    the bitter process actaully rewarded me with building more games such as minesweeper and snake game as they all implement same features, Sudoku solver is also something thats crossing my mind .
    Oh and yea , even after all this cant discredit the importance of how much useful it is to read other peoples code , you stop reading and you cant improve , i came this far as reading peoples code pays rich dividends .

    • @djooraTech
      @djooraTech Рік тому

      Where do you usually read them? Where do you have access to read other drvelopers code besides the usual googling? I am curious, i am new to web development/ programming realm. Thank you.

    • @djooraTech
      @djooraTech Рік тому

      @danse en rouge much appreciated. 👍

  • @Vrx-yp1eu
    @Vrx-yp1eu Рік тому +5

    I actually have the reverse issue. I've been programming since my early teen years. at the time I did it for fun, and never really looked into loading libraries, I actually went through a face were I thought that using other peoples code was cheating or lame. I don't think that way now, but I do find myself struggling to use libraries like react, or other frameworks. I've been using laravel for a couple of weeks now and I really enjoy it, but it's definitely different from what I'm used to.

  • @versan9135
    @versan9135 2 роки тому

    I think the content of this video is amazing! I'm building an api now together with a website and app.

  • @divyansh1158
    @divyansh1158 2 роки тому +6

    this was really useful for me as i was really getting stuck doing this

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  2 роки тому +1

      Really glad to hear this. It comes up a lot for people :-)

  • @adpartum
    @adpartum 9 місяців тому

    Sooo well explained !

  • @ivodelev9794
    @ivodelev9794 2 роки тому +21

    Me: "how to become a web-dev"
    UA-camr: "just build Facebook, LinkedIn, Amazon and you should be ready for junior position. "

    • @deidyomega
      @deidyomega Рік тому +3

      You'd be amazed how easy it is.
      A good dev could build a BASIC twitter clone in a weekend. The difference between a basic clone and the real deal is, handling scale, and ui/ux.
      And of feature set.

  • @daisy_haniii
    @daisy_haniii 8 місяців тому

    That's really helpful!

  • @VamsiKrishna-pp4fy
    @VamsiKrishna-pp4fy Рік тому +3

    You can also start with simple project, improvise that to intermediate and further make it cap stone level.
    You can combine multiple simple & intermediate projects to make it a composite cap stone project.

  • @dequan300
    @dequan300 10 місяців тому

    This was a great video Andy

  • @Kanthon
    @Kanthon 2 роки тому +7

    I wanted to build a checkbook register for tracking expenses. With a flat database and single monetary transactions per entry it was an intermediate project. Adding the ability for split entries with multiple transactions per entry brought it up to capstone level.

  • @gingerbeargames
    @gingerbeargames 2 роки тому +13

    I've just finished my first capstone which was sort of like webtoons but I wouldn't say a clone. I learned so much in a relatively short space of time, not just building the app itself but hosting it on cloud servers and debugging. It's now what I'm most proud of as it shows good database integration for populating pages as well as a custom cms system for publishing content.
    I'm ready to move on to my next project which I'm still working out what to do between a couple options and the only advice I think I could give to someone starting out on a capstone is to just make a start. Some days there's bugs/issues that you just really don't want to deal with but just start and try to get a bit done even if you don't manage multiple hours of work.

    • @yahiaelidrissi7214
      @yahiaelidrissi7214 2 роки тому

      Really motivating brother, can i find a way to contact you i am a UX/UI Designer. We might do something together in the future 🥰.

    • @gingerbeargames
      @gingerbeargames 2 роки тому

      @@yahiaelidrissi7214 my plate is pretty full at the moment sorry, hope you can find a good collab partner!

    • @brianhambre3649
      @brianhambre3649 Рік тому

      Can I see your webtoon like project? Just for inspiration, I really like manhwa, webtoons and manga and thinking of making projects about this in the future.

    • @gingerbeargames
      @gingerbeargames Рік тому

      @@brianhambre3649 I wouldn't be able to atm due to NDA related stuff.
      If you'd want I can go over the tools I've used to get it up to where it is, that'd give a starting point at least.

    • @brianhambre3649
      @brianhambre3649 Рік тому

      @@gingerbeargames Yes, that would definitely help me thanks.

  • @DolphinWantsPeace
    @DolphinWantsPeace 9 місяців тому

    I'm a bit late to this video, but i believe it would be great to know the thought process on how to start each project. As an example, building a calculator, what program/language do you choose to build it in and most importantly why? Would you do it in phyton exclusively or would you choose something else?
    Im gonna check out your channel entirely to see if you already posted the answer to my question, but if not, it would be a great help. I find that the most difficult thing is choosing/building the correct setup before even starting coding

  • @SoftwareTestingDimension
    @SoftwareTestingDimension 2 роки тому +8

    Also, real important is to handle asynchronous request and how to handle millions of records each time to be processed.
    Real world scenarios is to work with a file, load info into database, present group key info in web browser, then request a processed data into a file/report and these reports.

  • @phiwokwakhepho1922
    @phiwokwakhepho1922 10 місяців тому +1

    Wow i feel confident about my skills now when you said Tetris is challenging because I've done it before in C# and i must say that I also felt like giving up due to the bugs that i ran into,

  • @strahinjajankvic9384
    @strahinjajankvic9384 2 роки тому +307

    As the main project for this semester in my CS degree we are building a Search Engine that searches through documents and ranks them by similarity to the query and by popularity. It's not super-advanced but it is pretty good and functional. I'm only half way done now and I've put in 15-20 hours weekly for a month and a half now. Do you think that's a decent resume project, even though it's part of the curriculum?

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  2 роки тому +121

      That's a great project yes. I would rate this higher up on the scale because the algorithm "does" a lot and is not trivial.

    • @newguy3588
      @newguy3588 2 роки тому +9

      Heck yes

    • @llothar68
      @llothar68 Рік тому +3

      Did this in 1998 as my Master Thesis. Yes it's good.

    • @BakrAli10
      @BakrAli10 9 місяців тому

      Did you publish it? Or does anyone know of any similar tool?

    • @qwoolrat
      @qwoolrat 7 місяців тому

      @@BakrAli10 fzf with ripgrep has a nice interface too if you dont mind one more package

  • @jabrakoma
    @jabrakoma 2 роки тому

    This channel is really good man

  • @Horatius_23
    @Horatius_23 Рік тому

    Super content :) Thank you for the information. :)

  • @StickAndPotato
    @StickAndPotato Рік тому

    Thanks for sharing!

  • @jeancarlosinisterra9725
    @jeancarlosinisterra9725 Рік тому +4

    Currently, I´m building a Booking Appointment App for a Doctor's Clinic as my Capstone project. I´m really struggling because I´m working beyond my comfort zone. Based on the MERN stack, I plan to sell the project to a small Doctor's Clinic or a Beauty salon in my city. I plan to position myself in a popular place to be noticed as a self-taught Developer, with an ability beyond the average. I hope these every sleepless night brings its reward.

  • @lingofearth2786
    @lingofearth2786 2 роки тому

    You gave me some great ideas ❤️❤️

  • @jonasfounkeu5141
    @jonasfounkeu5141 2 роки тому +1

    thanks Andy, it's really great

  • @khonswebacademy5165
    @khonswebacademy5165 Рік тому +1

    Great thanks to you, I believe that you are one of the most reliable and useful person in this platform.
    Let me ask something, what about building some projects by watching vidoes, copy his/her code, get the idea about what is going on in each line????

  • @awakeamari5302
    @awakeamari5302 2 місяці тому

    Good looks brother you got me going there... I have 3 capstone

  • @josh1234567892
    @josh1234567892 Рік тому +20

    I actually wrote Tetris in C recently, it was a lot of fun and has definitely been a nice touch on my resume!

    • @awesomebearaudiobooks
      @awesomebearaudiobooks Рік тому +1

      Hello, can you please, say, how many interviews are you being invited to after sending how many resumes?

    • @moozebugz1583
      @moozebugz1583 6 місяців тому +1

      I tried doing this in java, I got somewhat far but it still isn't functional. I made the mistake I think of trying to use universal collisions for all my pieces? Any tips for line clearing and collision logic?

  • @nerdobject5351
    @nerdobject5351 2 роки тому +10

    I think one thing a lot developers miss when it comes to a career journey in coding is to try and look for opportunities in Professional Services first. The bar is very step in Product Development teams and get your nose wet in professional services is a great way to get experience and work your way up.

  • @TheArmchairrocker
    @TheArmchairrocker 2 роки тому +1

    I haven't looked for a job for the last 23 years or so but when I was applying back in the day, I brought an example program that I wrote which was a C++ version of Space Invaders.

  • @frankdearr2772
    @frankdearr2772 2 місяці тому

    Great topic, thanks 👍

  • @lemibekele669
    @lemibekele669 11 місяців тому

    very helpful video, thanks!

  •  2 роки тому +3

    Hey Andy! Thank you for the tips. As someone who started to learn programming many times, and usually stopping because of having no idea how to build the projects I had in mind, your video helped me realize that the problem was most likely that I was thinking too big.
    For the simple projects, you showcased some examples, which used some basic GUI. From what I've seen so far, this would require learning some kind of windowing or web library / framework to achieve. However, you said we shouldn't use libraries or frameworks. Could you expand on this part? I assume you meant that we shouldn't learn a library or framework extensively at this point, just some of their most basic functionality.

  • @vurra
    @vurra 2 місяці тому

    you really dropped some gems in this one!

  • @EducationTravelGuide
    @EducationTravelGuide Рік тому

    amazing project idea.

  • @abedalraoufzeidan1461
    @abedalraoufzeidan1461 2 роки тому

    great video this is what iam actually doing and it turned to be right thanks

  • @minademian
    @minademian 6 місяців тому

    Great video. Thank you.

  • @m9ant
    @m9ant Рік тому

    Thank you Andy, I actually watched this earlier today and I paused the video when you talked about the simple apps.
    I made the digital clock and I wasn't gonna stop until I made it because it seemed very simple. It did take some time but I got it done and it's a good beginning for me !

  • @DevPool
    @DevPool 2 роки тому +1

    Hey Andy gereat video and I love the practice project ideas!

  • @mascode1
    @mascode1 Рік тому

    Very informative video!

  • @jamesbell8148
    @jamesbell8148 2 роки тому +4

    Always great content 👌 👏 👍

  • @juansuarez3384
    @juansuarez3384 Рік тому

    Awesome video. Thanks .

  • @alkxo
    @alkxo 2 роки тому

    We had a project in my university, that made us create a digital circuit on a breadboard, and the circuit would be made from a txt file. So I would type the gate type, column, input 1 and 2 and the output,and I'd get the result. That could give me any circuit I wanted. Of course first I had a class for every gate.

  • @feijaodo
    @feijaodo 2 роки тому +1

    @andy sterkowitz
    You have absolutely no idea how helpful this was, I really had no good concept of how to prove and accurately rate my usefulness🙏🏽

  • @parsamousavinasab1155
    @parsamousavinasab1155 Рік тому

    so helpful, thanks

  • @Dwafford01
    @Dwafford01 9 місяців тому

    when I originally started my project for my degree, I thought it was a simple project. Listening to your video I've realised it's slightly more complex, somewhere between intermediate to capstone. All I know is it's exiting, and driving me nuts at the same time.

  • @HarimaKentaro
    @HarimaKentaro Рік тому

    I really need to get started on this :P most of the time i just do simple projects and maybe intermediate ones. Definitely need some capstone or actual apps that useable and get my foot in the field :P

  • @horikatanifuji5038
    @horikatanifuji5038 Рік тому +2

    I still have my Intro to Computer Science Projects from College, they didn't have any UI whatsoever (besides terminal prompt), but after the third project, they are all well above 1000 lines of code, last one was 2,132 lines of code. (All build in Java)

  • @subhasrini2706
    @subhasrini2706 2 роки тому

    Loved it!

  • @kidbrave_7673
    @kidbrave_7673 2 роки тому +2

    Dope content Andy! I totally agree with those projects and the level of complicity. I'm a developer for my company that just uses html and css, so I'm currently on my javascript journey learning to build websites with features so I'm more familiar with the language while at the same time building them out so I'm growing as a developer applying my knowledge or researching my solution never the less I'm growing either way so I can be job ready in the industry as a javascript developer.

    • @jkli14
      @jkli14 2 роки тому +2

      you got a dev job just using html and css ?

    • @kidbrave_7673
      @kidbrave_7673 2 роки тому

      @@jkli14 Yea have you heard of email development or html developer?

    • @jkli14
      @jkli14 2 роки тому +3

      @@kidbrave_7673 I have actually. I applied to like like 2-3, got nothing.
      I did just get hired for a backend position Monday, although I’m front end guy. Would rather much prefer front end, but they are training me for backend. I’m just glad for the professional experience.

    • @kidbrave_7673
      @kidbrave_7673 2 роки тому +1

      @@jkli14 First off congradulations that's a huge win bro!! What's your tech stack, also can I see your portfolio? I could review it and email you my perspectives if you're trying to work as an email developer. I saw you saying you applied to 2-3 companies and that's solid, but I applied to at least 50-100 companies to finally land this job, as you know in tech theres so many companies looking for devs and alot of those companies get inspiring devs or one's that only know the very basics on the web and then they throw their hat in the ring, so if you still want to work at a front dev. I can definitely help you with a review and my industry expertise on the industry. However, let me ask this would this current role for this company be your first job?

    • @jkli14
      @jkli14 2 роки тому +1

      Portfolio is pretty simple. I would def prefer to do front end. I’m literally doing the complete opposite of what I pretty much been teaching myself on and off for the last 3 years 😂😂

  • @Pablo_Anunnaki
    @Pablo_Anunnaki 2 роки тому

    That's the way. I haven't done any yet but I can sense it.

  • @nikolalevterov9750
    @nikolalevterov9750 2 роки тому

    Good guy, I enjoy your videos.

  • @Python3.10
    @Python3.10 Рік тому

    Thanks for giving this idea beacuse its very good guiedline

  • @gatomio9739
    @gatomio9739 11 місяців тому

    Interesting, I am a complete python newbie but I will try to learn. Thanks for the video 😊

  • @jeremiahedum5916
    @jeremiahedum5916 11 місяців тому

    Thanks Andy

  • @hyonyx9435
    @hyonyx9435 2 роки тому

    Thank you!

  • @koshygkoshy4783
    @koshygkoshy4783 2 роки тому

    Thank you my brother

  • @MarionetteKazuko
    @MarionetteKazuko 9 місяців тому

    2:37 ok you brilliant bastard, subbed.

  • @tripzymc
    @tripzymc Рік тому

    thank you for the tips im trying to be a web developer so thank you for the idea

  • @mightydawnweb
    @mightydawnweb 3 місяці тому

    "This is good enough" at 2:22 😂 Oh my! You had to work to make that look that bad. 😂 As a designer, I'm so glad you said that because there is NO WAY I would have let something look that bad. But now I'll put in a bit less effort in the design/style department.