Software Development
Myths and Facts About Programming
What’s this?
A collection of common myths and facts (opinionated) about computer programming that I wish I knew in my early career.
Programming requires math
- Neutral.
- Only a few percentages of programmers deal with math problems in their careers.
- Analytical skills help to break down the problem. Think of programming as understanding the problem, breaking down into smaller steps, and solving it. Similar to math right?
- However, people who are bad at Math can be a good programmer. It also depends on the type of role and type of problem they are trying to solve.
Programming job is similar to a typist. It’s all about typing code.
- False
- Programming(at entry level) is about:
- reading documentation and requirements
- documenting stuff
- thinking how to write code
- writing code
- testing
- debugging bugs
- deploying
- discuss with team member/management
- The amount of time you spend typing code depends on your role and job description. There will be days you won’t be typing any code.
- Majority of programming job requires maintaining an existing system written over the years by several people. You will be required to add features, customize, fix bugs, etc
You won’t require a college degree to be a programmer
Everyone can learn and be a programmer within months
Programming is really hard
- Neutral.
- It depends on the individual, their learning/intellectual capability, and the type of programming role they learn/get into.
- There will be certain things you can learn easily. But a college degree will help to broaden your perspective and learn things quickly.
Programming is monotonous. Its like working in the assembly line at a factory
- False
- On certain days or working in the same role for a long time, you may get a feel of your job being monotonous.
- But it’s not like working in the assembly line. It requires lots of thinking and analysis.
Programming is not for girls
- False
You need to keep reading new stuff throughout your career
- Neutral
- You don’t “need to”. But learning new stuff helps advance your career.
- Also, it depends on the type of tool and technologies you are using. Some tools/technology (eg: JS Frameworks) get deprecated every few years. Sometimes
- Learning a new paradigm, best practices, new architecture concepts is always useful.
Machine Learning and AI seems easy to learn.
I don’t have any knowledge of statistics/probability/modeling. However, the ML/AI tutorial I found online is just 10 lines of code and it seems easy.
- False
- It may seem easy to use ML/AI tools created by somebody else or follow a cookbook. But you will need to understand many concepts to use those tools when solving real problems. Don’t get intimidated by simple tutorials. Start by the basics and dig into the tools.
Using long variable makes program slow. So I should program like this:
1 2 3 4 | int a = read() int b = 1000 if (a > 18 && b > 50 ) println( "Entry allowed" ) |
- False
- With compiled languages, no. With interpreted languages, possibly but the difference would be negligible.
- Always focus on readability. Compare the above code with the following:
1 2 3 4 | int age = readMemberAge() int balance = 1000 if (age > 18 && balance > 50 ) println( "Entry allowed" ) |
I have to learn as many programming languages eg C, Python, Java, Ruby, Kotlin, Scala, Groovy, C#, Go to be a good programmer.
- False
- Think of programming language as natural language eg: Nepali, French, English, Japanese, and Chinese. And the art of writing a novel or poem as the actual programming. If you mastered five languages but do not have a skill of writing a (good) poem in either of those you are still not an artist.
- Think of programming as art. Try to be an artist in at least one language. Think of a hobby project and develop with paying attention to code quality, performance, UI, features, etc.
- Focus on learning programming rather than learning a language.
- Programming is a skill that you can gain with just one language. If you know how to do X in Y language then you can do it in Z language too with little effort.
HackerRank, LeetCode will guarantee me a job
- False
- There’s no doubt that the questions on those sites help you think critically and solve a problem.
- Its a widely used screening method to filter our candidates these days.
- Pet project(s) and your college projects will also help you land the first job.
Google, Amazon and Facebook are using X tool. It must be good so I should learn.
- False
- A lot of tools developed by tech-giants are being deprecated after a couple of years.
- Looks for a tool/language/framework that’s being used by a lot of companies for a long time.
X was developed by Google, Amazon, and Facebook so it must be good. I should learn and use it.
- False
- There’s no guarantee that those tools MUST be good. Don’t fall for advertisements
- Review 100 job descriptions on Linkedin/Indeed etc and find yourself what’s popular on the market
I must learn Angular, React, Vue and XYZ web framework to master my web development skills
- False
- It’s better to start the web development without the frameworks so that you understand how those frameworks are solving the problems of not using those frameworks
- You don’t need to learn all of these, one would be enough. If you started learning web development without using frameworks, switching between frameworks would be easier.
I know X1 framework/library/tool. But the job vacancy says mentions X2(the alternative of X1). I should not apply for this job.
- False
- Test yourself if you know X1 framework/library/tool how long you will take to learn X2.
- As long as you know the abstract concepts and have worked on at least one pet/professional project on your own there’s a high chance that you can learn another framework/library/tool quickly. They all are trying to solve a similar project but slightly different ways.
- Also look for ‘preferred’ vs ‘required’ skills on job vacancies.
Everyone on social media hates language/framework X. X must be bad.
- False
- Don’t fall for people’s ‘opinions’. People think languages/frameworks/tools as religion. They hate each other.
- The best way to find out what to learn is to look at job vacancies. At least a hundred of them.
Language X does that in one line. So, it is the best language.
- Neutral
1 | DB.allRecords().read().toCsv( "file.csv" ); |
- It’s nice that they provided that functionality in one line out of the box. But there is a great deal of code hidden behind the scene.
- All languages support creating library modules to extend the feature. Some languages are by nature too abstract/low level and it requires developers to write libraries around it to make things simpler.
- So, that doesn’t mean language X is best.
Want to add more Q/A and correct sth?
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Published on Java Code Geeks with permission by Ganesh Tiwari, partner at our JCG program. See the original article here: Myths and Facts About Programming Opinions expressed by Java Code Geeks contributors are their own. |
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