What to learn? What is the best profile of a developer? How to improve developing skills? Those are the principal questions that every passionate developer asks.
I interviewed a lot of new fresh developers for recruitment or for training; I read many CVs and what I can say about all of them is that every single one of them is counting the number of frameworks he knows.
“Well, I know .NET, I know JEE, I know Symfony and I’m really good with Python Django.”
Mmm OK! But can you tell me why we use interfaces in OOP, why we use getters and setters, what the difference between a static
method and a non-static
method and how the memory handles them, what are the four principals of OOP. Do you know what a floating point is? What do you know about parallel programming and monitors?
Those are generally my questions, and sadly only few developers were able to answer them and the reason behind it is because they didn't correctly answer the above questions. Because you see, I don’t really care about how many frameworks you know, I don’t care about how many .NET certificates you have because the real question is do you know how to code.
After all, frameworks are a collection of ready-to-use code, you just Google them and you will find the suitable class to use, but if don’t know how to code, you will never know what to look for and you will still writing crap code even if you know all the available classes.
So what to learn? Personally, I suggest starting with the C language, have fun programming, look for complex problems (like the 8 queen problem, sorting...) and enjoy yourself solving them, feel the power of algorithms, feel the greatness of creation. No UI, no buttons, just you and the console displaying green text (nice effect). Why is the C language important? Well, first of all, developers must master data structures and coding (can actually write a good if
statement and loops). Second, the C language is arguably a low level programming language so developers will deal with low level details like memory management (pointers) and also some other stuff like floating points numbers (check this tutorial here), fixing point numbers (check this article here), processor cache and memory, and many other low level issues that help developers understand computers and create better optimized code in future. Also I suggest writing a TCP/UDP C based application to deal with low level sockets and network layers. So stop dragging and dropping UI, stop that Android/Windows phone application that you are doing and go develop some real sh*ts.
After playing with C language, go and learn some oriented object language (I recommend Java) and please instead of Googling every single library, try to understand the basics of OOP, learn what actually is a static
method, why we have public
, private
and protected
keywords, learn why we are using getters and setters, try to feel the real power of encapsulation, write basic programs that show the value of OOP. After developing some of your own projects and after making all kind of mistakes, start reading other people’s code, fall in love with design patterns and SOLID principals, learn them and try to applies them every single time you write a piece of OOP code.
Now you have a nice understanding of OOP, you can change the air by learning concurrency and parallel programming. Study what a mutex is doing, what is a monitor… Implement some fun problems like the traffic problem. Concurrency is fun but hard so learn it. At the same time, try to learn about compilation process, learn about state transition diagrams and grammars… And if you have time and effort, try to understand operating systems and how they work by implementing one (of course, with minimum functionality, it can be just a console that displays information about hardware), have a look at SOS (simple operating system) here.
I know that was some hard concept and needs a lot of time and efforts to master. But hey, you are the one who wants to be the super developer, so work for it.
My final thought will be a developer that really understands programming and has a great ability to learn is much better than a developer that knows all the framework classes, knows how to use them, but writes sh***y code.
I'm a developer, software architect and a I have my own start up, I' worked with different technologies(.Net , java j2ee, Python , Python django, PHP, PHP symfony...). Our company is working on the distributed systems and cloud solution(IAAS tools, SAAS architecture and software) I like to read about technologies and I like also to blog and write articles.