Much as I like this thread, I think that the distinction
between autodidact and course-taught programmers (which
trs80's node doesn't touch, but most of the responses
take for granted) is bogus. For instance, I started
programming (and learning about programming, which sadly
isn't always the same thing) well before I took any formal
courses on it, but I'm most of the way through a rather
intense CS degree. Where does that put me?
If we take an autodidact to be someone who's willing to
learn on their own, then a hell of a lot of CS students are
autodidacts. In my case, I've either gotten interested in
a topic, taught myself about it, and taken courses on it
(computer graphics, for instance), or I've taken a likely
looking course, gotten interested, and kept reading and
learning well after writing the final (AI). In both cases,
taking courses and learning independently is far
more effective than doing either by itself.
- The autodidact who disdains formal learning is
misguided at best. Universities are wonderful places to
learn about programming: the facilities are excellent,
the profs are knowledgeable and motivated, and the
material will broaden your mind.
- The course-taught programmer who disdains
autodidactics is misguided at best. Learning by reading
and doing gives you practical experience as well as
theoretical knowledge, and lets you focus on what you
find fun.
- You won't have to tell a good programmer to learn:
they're already doing it.
--
:wq
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