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| | Learn by Programming or Learn Programming to Program? | | 6 points by externalreality on June 16, 2019 | hide | past | favorite | 3 comments | | When I was younger I learned to program because I wanted to write a program. I never wanted to "Learn C" I just kept on reading chapters of K&R so that I could write my program (Just a small game). Now, decades later, I just finished reading "The Rust Programming Language" with no real desire to write a program -- I just wanted to read the book. Great language but I have this sort of empty feeling -- kind of like "What now". I wonder how many people suffer from this. I'll likely will never get paid to write Rust, and given I find programming to be the the least lucrative way to put my tech skills to use, I guess I'll likely never get to use Rust. How many people learn languages that they will never get to use? |
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They might think they know how to program in C (ferinstance), but they will only be able to prove they truly know how by producing a non-trivial program.
Perhaps rewrite one of your old programs in your new language. It's a method that's worked for me many times.