You need the right tools. I'm learning by myself at the moment. A programming book is better (for me at least) than an online course.Never could catch on to Python. I was studying math at university and we had to take the course. Anyway, I don't feel the professor was good at teaching Python - though he probably was at math (his other subject).
Not enough to time learn Python really. But then again, that's the same thing in anything. I mean, if everybody could learn Calculus in one semester - everybody would be rich (Well, not really - that would drive down the salary.).You need the right tools. I'm learning by myself at the moment. A programming book is better (for me at least) than an online course.
Love HTML5. I'm so used to coding in HTML that I don't look at other coding languagesWhat languages do you like? What do you find the most challenging? Which are the easiest/hardest? What is your goal with languages?
Learning phyton first will help you become very good at coding. As a beginner, it will also help you understand most of the basics involved.Laifot said:I work with Java, C++ and Ruby. My goal would be learning phyton and php.