7 Habits I've Picked Up From Senior Software Developers

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  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
  • In this video I explain the 7 habits of successful software developers from my interactions and observations with some very skilled developers.
    📄 ** DOWNLOAD MY FREE STUDY MANUAL **
    To download my FREE Self-Taught Programmer Study Manual PDF go to: andysterkowitz.com/study-manual/
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 358

  • @AndySterkowitz
    @AndySterkowitz  Před 3 lety +54

    What are your biggest takeaways from this video?

    • @mochaCF61
      @mochaCF61 Před 3 lety +6

      My biggest takeaway was to keep learning and to keep an open mind.

    • @omarmirza9957
      @omarmirza9957 Před 3 lety +11

      A big takeaway for me: the ability to focus is something to work on, not something fixed once and for all.

    • @noobgoestrapping5084
      @noobgoestrapping5084 Před 3 lety +10

      Just great perspectives. Your videos have a knack for repeating the same thing in new ways that help remind you of important things that keep you grounded and motivated. Top notch stuff.

    • @georgechijarira6074
      @georgechijarira6074 Před 3 lety +2

      The helping others really hit home. In order to explain something to someone you need to understand it at a deeper level.

    • @roberthollingsworth3545
      @roberthollingsworth3545 Před 3 lety +1

      First habit of this video: I developed a system to focus your mind in two weeks to a month..a proven system. It works for anyone from Jr. High and up that is mature and motivated. So, I have heard this number one complaint. I am a software engineer with these problems. I am accomplished in my field. I created it 35 years ago when I was in college and during the last 20 years i have been testing it. Just saying this is a problem.

  • @casparbosch5615
    @casparbosch5615 Před 3 lety +145

    1. Being able to focus, reminded me that my 1 hour break had passed...

    • @augusto256
      @augusto256 Před 3 lety +6

      Dont take 1h breaks. Take 20min breaks instead.

    • @casparbosch5615
      @casparbosch5615 Před 3 lety +2

      @@augusto256 I'll do that, it was also that my break had become longer than planned...

    • @pranavkumar1818
      @pranavkumar1818 Před 3 lety

      My life like right now !!!

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow Před rokem +23

    At my first junior position I was asked to build stuff from scratch that almost made my head explode. On top of that my bosses demanded without mercy that I give them accurate time estimates on how long it would take me to complete the tasks at hand. I don't recall how, but I was able to deliver by the end of almost each day. Needless to say that my estimates were way off. But I can attest to the fact that finding the tiniest elements of a problem and then grinding away at them relentlessly with every line of code is a skill worth fighting for. It may take you 12 hours to complete something that a mid level dev can do in 30 minutes. But the reward lies in the fact that you made it with your own bare hands, determination and completely without the need to ask anyone except google for help. Grit is absolutely key here.

  • @ronnieross711
    @ronnieross711 Před 3 lety +58

    Read books to help with concentration. Never thought about reading like that. What a tool to use.

    • @zuvlet
      @zuvlet Před 3 lety +1

      A better tool. Playing video games helped me focus

    • @midnull6009
      @midnull6009 Před 2 lety

      I'm multilingual and I read books in my first language. That REALLY gets my noggin' working.

  • @tjobrien7518
    @tjobrien7518 Před 3 lety +48

    Andy: focus on one thing at a time
    Me: yes makes sense
    Also Me: *watching this video while watching The Office while eating while watching my kid*

  • @andmoreagain
    @andmoreagain Před 3 lety +249

    Makes me feel a lot better about myself to hear that in your experience a lot of devs have some form of ADD/ADHD. Thanks for this vid.

    • @AndySterkowitz
      @AndySterkowitz  Před 3 lety +10

      Glad to help!

    • @vonb2792
      @vonb2792 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah I am ADHD intensive too. Been running around everywhere and super social, but now I am finally settling to develop programming. Taking programming + accounting

    • @GraveRave
      @GraveRave Před 3 lety +7

      @@AndySterkowitz I'm not a coder but an aspiring UI/UX Designer, and my problem is finding the right music playlist to help me focus. It's really something I struggle with.

    • @imqqmi
      @imqqmi Před 3 lety +5

      @@GraveRave I often put on music with little to no percussion/drums/beats, no (clear) lyrics and slow/adagio tempo. Many classical pieces like adagio for strings, hymn of the cherubim, the lark ascending by Ralph Vaughan Williams or game Skyrim has lots of ambient pieces by Jeremy Soule, some Enya/celtic acapella songs etc.
      But when I really need to concentrate I turn the music off, nothing beats the quiet as far as distractions go. Unless you try to drown out other sounds. You're at a disatvantage in that case. Moving to a quiet location would be a perminent solution. Failing that, using noise cancelling headphones with optional music at a low level, or pink/brown noise, asmr of seawaves, rain, wind through leaves etc could be a temporary solution. But after a days work it'll still be tiring.

    • @Gazaryt
      @Gazaryt Před 3 lety +1

      I have a kinda mild to normal OCD, i feel like it's harder for people to vibe with me could that have something to do with it, i haven't thought about it actually

  • @errrzarrr
    @errrzarrr Před 3 lety +46

    Ability to concentrate: Yeah. Until that notification makes a sound to remember you of your 3rd Scrum meeting of the day to _Discuss how important is that feature you are working on and if you're completing it anytime soon_

    • @YuriyNasretdinov
      @YuriyNasretdinov Před 3 lety +3

      The answer to that problem is actually very simple: find a job that doesn't have useless meetings :). They do exist and those companies also usually tend to earn a lot of money, by, you know, being very efficient in general.

    • @bradleybeach
      @bradleybeach Před 3 lety +2

      I've worked for several companies where if a meeting isn't productive you can just get up and leave. Where I'm at currently if you're busy working on something you type "heads down" in slack and don't go to the meeting. Definately something to ask about durring the interview process, remember if you're applying for a job it means you can do the work, you're just trying to figure out if it's a place you actually want to work.

    • @TheJacklwilliams
      @TheJacklwilliams Před 2 lety

      @@bradleybeach Yeah I haven't worked in dev in years and while I'm learning python and digging into other subjects, what I've seen/heard of SCRUM/Agile/Etc... I'm not sure that I'm going to have an easy time buying in... Who knows, I could become a convert (never say never) but I've lived in the vacuum of no communications and the other end where meeting hell was never ending and the only way to do ones job was work fourteen hours a day. Seven for meetings and seven for work...

    • @midnull6009
      @midnull6009 Před 2 lety

      Interview the interviewee so that this doesn't happen...
      I always interview who interviews me. And random people that pass by nonchalantly.
      People really like to talk. :)

  • @johnshaw6702
    @johnshaw6702 Před 3 lety +20

    You did a great job of explaining good habits. I agree with everything you said.
    1. Sometimes it is hard to let go of a piece of code that you know can be better, but time really is money. This is something I have struggled with many time in may career.
    2. You can be really good at something, but, until you can explain it, you don't really understand it yourself. This is basically true. Explaining ( a.k.a. teaching) is the best way I know of defining the problem and solution. I've solved issues in the past by explaining it to a non-programer in terms they could understand. They'll say something like "if I understand it right. Why don't you do {blank}" and boom down goes the mental block - solution is born.
    I do recommend not disturbing a programmer on a roll. He may loose his train of thought, which slows things down, and may piss him off. Personal experience from the programmers point of view.

  • @treyGivens1
    @treyGivens1 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for making this video. It's so nice to think that you found it in your heart to provide content that helps people. What a beautiful thing.

  • @qwarlockz8017
    @qwarlockz8017 Před 3 lety +4

    Hey Andy, thanks for a great vid. You should be on peoples regular viewing list since you create this positive and productive reinforcement loop that is always really important to stay moving. Motivation is really important and listening and talking to people like you... is key. Thanks again.

  • @karlasolares4283
    @karlasolares4283 Před 3 lety +6

    Thanks Andy! Great tips! :D I needed to listen to this. I'm a junior developer and I am constantly wondering how to become better and grow not only as a dev but also as a person

  • @infinity818425
    @infinity818425 Před 3 lety +23

    Thank you for this. It seems overwhelming sometimes and you have made it manageable

  • @dougebersole1204
    @dougebersole1204 Před 3 lety +2

    Great video, Andy. I really appreciate all of your great content.

  • @r1ch007cs123
    @r1ch007cs123 Před 3 lety +1

    Your content is honest and to the point. KEEP IT UP!

  • @fuskyful
    @fuskyful Před 2 lety +2

    This is the best video any software developer should watch. I have always valued soft skills when hiring new devs over experience. Because those people create better teams which can achieve better things. You just named a lot of them in a very good way. Thank you for this, it was very refreshing.

  • @agnetafelicia5961
    @agnetafelicia5961 Před 2 lety +4

    So combining knitting with coding makes sense! I am focused and at the same time cooking certain ideas in my brain.

    • @TheJacklwilliams
      @TheJacklwilliams Před 2 lety +1

      I've never done it, but grew up with it done around me... That said I'd say knitting is truly a recursive function. I could see how one could do so and also work this line...

  • @MyrkDomolith
    @MyrkDomolith Před 3 lety +11

    On the focus thing: The two most noticeable/common symptoms of ADD and ADHD are an extreme difficulty with focusing and hyperfocus- which is essentially the opposite. Improving your focus also includes your ability to break or lose your focus with grace- particularly with the hyperfocus. Toughest hurdle here is simply letting yourself be unfocused. Counter-intuitive, but (re)gaining your focus is easier when you're not busy fighting with yourself, and it lets you get to that autonomous type of focus people call "the zone".
    On automation: Do include routine stuff that requires a choice outside of work. Saves on mental energy that'll let you help focus and learn, saves time, saves headaches. There's the preventative version like having identical outfits, then there's reactive- like the pick-5, choose-best-2, go-with-1 method that you can use for making meals or going out to eat.
    On efficiency and refactoring: Basically: don't use clever code, and maintain a single coding system/style- IE if your data's stored in hierarchical classes/objects, stick to that with your implementation. Work out the problem however you like, otherwise. This also means learning which issues are already solved and where. A dev doesn't need to worry about dev-mode override stuff if the dev mode code gets removed before the release is put in production.
    On unconscious talent and studying: Share your knowledge with your coworkers. The smaller the gap between your knowledge of a system and your coworkers' knowledge, the more of your own work you can do.
    On following your interests: This includes interests that aren't coding and dev-related. Draw, make music, cook, play video games, solve puzzles, do your favorite kind of "nothing", whatever interests you, and let yourself suck or be stupid while you're at it.
    More personal fulfillment means more productivity, more mindsets to work with means it's easier to learn and work on tough problems, more technical skills and knowledge in other fields makes communication easier, and more transferable skills both bolsters the prior two "more"s and opens you up to avenues of success in the first place.
    Plus it's nice to simply recharge every once in a while.

    • @denisetheur5641
      @denisetheur5641 Před 3 lety +4

      As a person with ADHD, this was so such a helpful comment! Thank you sooo much

    • @samerel-murr2115
      @samerel-murr2115 Před 3 lety +3

      I don't know if this helps but for me what helps is being around other people focusing and break down tasks to 15-25min. Also be realistic with can be done in a day, with giving enough time for at least one thing you want to do outside of work/university-work. Last thing is that meditation helped me at least with improving the quality of the time I have focusing on the task, I haven't really found it actually making my focus last longer.

    • @itsjuliam
      @itsjuliam Před 9 měsíci

      An incredibly helpful comment. Thanks.

  • @DrDemolition
    @DrDemolition Před 2 lety

    That last advice is SUPER HELPFUL.
    Subbed.

  • @PsoMyth
    @PsoMyth Před 3 lety +3

    Even thought I've ended up developing in a visual DSL type environment, I find that most of these still hit home and hold true for development that feels more like configuration/admin work.

  • @carol00210
    @carol00210 Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you so much for dedicating your time to people you don’t even know. I really enjoyed your video and got really inspired from the first tip since I also have ADHD, but notice that the hyper focus that it makes me have relatively frequently helps me a lot with my programming tasks. It feels like the code and me become one and one only, and nothing in this world can break the frenesi of wanting to solve the task I got in front of me. When I’m hyper focused for a longer period of time I even dream of coding and solve problems in my dreams, which I find so interesting. I heard once ADHD brains have an obsession with logic problems, which I find so true, because while I don’t solve the problem I can’t rest. So I think it’s a very good trait to have as a programmer, after all. Thanks for helping me to see my ADHD in a more positive way. All the other tips were also incredible :)

    • @afshah.7972
      @afshah.7972 Před rokem +1

      I've got ADD and I can relate to what you said. I am a beginner studying basic coding and I code in my dreams too which feels amazing ;)

  • @UNGETABLE7
    @UNGETABLE7 Před 2 lety

    Your videos are a gem man, always helpful. Thank you!

  • @josephanthony9294
    @josephanthony9294 Před 3 lety +1

    Great Video. You have very good insights and I especially like "Strong opinions, loosely held".

  • @analisamelojete1966
    @analisamelojete1966 Před 3 lety +11

    Tip to concentrate: Play your favourite music without lyrics (mine is synth-wave when coding) and think what you’re doing is like a video game.
    Then you’ll focus quite easily.

  • @jordanweir7187
    @jordanweir7187 Před 3 lety

    These are all absolute gold dude thanks for uploading, subbed

  • @rayko12345
    @rayko12345 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks dude! Appreciated! Really need to focus on the last one, finding that interest I had before!

  • @thomasmeister8476
    @thomasmeister8476 Před 3 lety +2

    Working in the field for 20 years - still learned something :-) Thanks for this video!

  • @robscherer
    @robscherer Před 3 lety

    A constant flow of good info, love it!

  • @Ronobuildstech
    @Ronobuildstech Před 2 lety +1

    i gotta say this man thank you , the books that you suggest have really improved my perception of things;

  • @bryanstark324
    @bryanstark324 Před 2 lety

    Super good tip! Take a step back because we often hyperfocus on details because we're afraid it will end up being a screw up down the road. But step back and realize that good-enough is good-enough.

  • @krushnamahapatra2751
    @krushnamahapatra2751 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Most keypoints I have brief down in points from this video -
    - Focous - most important
    - Automate => automate repetitive things
    - be pragmatic => Don't waste a lot of time on refactoring => yes optimising is good but you have to deliver your product also so
    - Teaching/Helping Others => if you can't make understand the concept to an 5yr old kid then you are not as good as you think => good communication skills
    - Be Openminded => be willing to listen to others opening => be willing to adopt with the latest idea & tech =>accepting that in diff ways we can solving a problem
    - Open to feedback => oraganic discussion with seniors => best pratice design patterns => how to make code readable + efficient
    - Follow your interest => learn always new things so that you won't loose interest in what you are doing => try to learn two tech at a same time(better opt)

  • @Kaizala1933
    @Kaizala1933 Před 2 lety

    Great Content as always, thank you Andy!!

  • @seyieneimeyase
    @seyieneimeyase Před 3 lety +8

    Thank you for the timely dose of inspiration and motivation. 😊👍

  • @stillwaitingforblackmetalr2503

    Hey man, on point 1, people with ADD actually don't have any issues hyper focusing. ADD is actually when people go from hyper focus to 0 focus, with no in-between. For someone with ADD, hyper focusing on things you love doing is as easy as breathing. They can spend 12 hours straight, no breaks to even drink water or go to the bathroom, doing the same thing. But give them a task that doesn't excite them and they won't be able to focus for more than 1 minute.
    So if most programmer you know have ADD, it's not a weird coincidence, it actually makes MORE sense.

  • @MwishaLudack
    @MwishaLudack Před 3 lety

    Awesome thanks Andy, I'm new to this game so I need every opinion I can get from the experts. Good job.

  • @poloe4
    @poloe4 Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks a lot for this. Very helpful!!!

  • @khalil4968
    @khalil4968 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for the video, very informative and clear!

  • @viperactual
    @viperactual Před 2 lety

    Glad to know there are devs out there like me. Great advice.

  • @elrogelio
    @elrogelio Před 3 lety +1

    Very good video man. I definitely need to work on my focus.

  • @KS-df1cp
    @KS-df1cp Před 2 lety

    Syntax is one thing but mindset matters! Thank you for these details. This was very helpful.

  • @leecherlarry
    @leecherlarry Před 3 lety

    the growth of this channal is mind blowing, congrats Andy!!

  • @mattgraves3709
    @mattgraves3709 Před rokem +1

    Great video.
    I've been in a senior role for a bit over a year and a team lead for longer, but I find the more responsibility I get, the more focus is key because the work becomes more interrupt driven for the 9-5...so any development that I need to do frankly happens before or after hours.
    Currently, I am working as platform team lead for a Fortune 5 enterprise size company and on a cross governance team over seeing a dozen teams and assisting with reviewing the code of ~60 engineers.
    Yep, interrupted and needing to help others all day.
    The ADD comes back and I just decided to find my couple of golden hours before work and treat it religiously.
    Funny you mention the ability to be teachable, critical but open minded. Trying to get into an architect spot and the Sr Architect and I had a great debate over the way we do branching and he won me over after about 30 minutes but I push back respectfully until his points sank in.

  • @NatureFreak1127
    @NatureFreak1127 Před 2 lety

    This video and the one on how to think like a programmer is also very relevant for UX as well. Thank you. ♥️

  • @AYoonesi
    @AYoonesi Před 2 lety

    I've seen many of your vids, I guess the most important thing is not to give up, at least it was for me for years - great content, hope more will reach you

  • @valis007
    @valis007 Před 2 lety

    Useful, thank you, will start to apply your advice and practice more, cheers from Paris

  • @keithberjeron763
    @keithberjeron763 Před 2 lety

    I have gotten a lot from your videos! I really like your presence, and that beard... That beard is great! It really suits you. You're pleasing to all the senses available through the upload.
    Thank you for what you do! I appreciate you

  • @lukesmall5571
    @lukesmall5571 Před rokem

    Great video! Once I get into a software development job I will defiantly make these habits of mine!

  • @adamhenry5019
    @adamhenry5019 Před 3 lety

    Keepin me motivated good stuff legend

  • @Kmm1295
    @Kmm1295 Před 2 lety

    Wow thank you for mentioning add and focus issues. I always believed you become a programmer only if you are good at focusing. Turns out we need a lot of focus training 👍 Its inspiring to see that focus does not come naturally sometimes🙏🏻

  • @patrickedet5475
    @patrickedet5475 Před 2 lety

    Very Informative video ! Thanks

  • @gregkail4348
    @gregkail4348 Před 2 lety

    Thank You for this
    I need to watch it again a most likely again........

  • @joelwembo
    @joelwembo Před 3 lety +1

    Automation Automation is my favorite. And following a well Tested and Written Notes or Guidelines

  • @AlessandroBottoni
    @AlessandroBottoni Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent video! Every programmer should watch it. Congratulations!

  • @macuilxochitli
    @macuilxochitli Před 2 lety

    Very good advices these that you are giving us here Andy,.am quite new developer but i think your comemts are wise.cheers from Chile!!

  • @tehtapemonkey
    @tehtapemonkey Před 3 lety

    I wish you all success in your learning endeavors!

  • @christinewasike
    @christinewasike Před rokem

    I genuinely loved this!😊

  • @TheAndres7777
    @TheAndres7777 Před rokem

    thanks! I learn a lot with your videos.

  • @FabledNarrative
    @FabledNarrative Před 3 lety

    This video helped a LOT! Thank you! ☺️

  • @-Jason-L
    @-Jason-L Před 3 lety +52

    "readability" should never be compromised. Every nightmare codebase became that way one pragmatic decision at a time. Skipping it is a false efficiency, propagated by devs who are accustomed to the old project based approach (primarily among services companies) where someone else needs to fix/maintain/enhance their work.

    • @harry356
      @harry356 Před 2 lety +2

      I think it's a balance. Sometimes the cost of doing it the "right way" destroys readability and introduces a lot complexibility, and sometimes improving readability makes the code much more complex. Sometimes an ugly hack is just a good solution.

    • @Max-db6hq
      @Max-db6hq Před 2 lety +2

      @@harry356 ​you can make your ugly hacks as long as you maintain them yourself, for the lifetime of the application. Otherwise there is no "balance", it's just you being lazy and destroying the lives of other people who have to maintain your mess.

    • @harry356
      @harry356 Před 2 lety

      @@Max-db6hq well I do think you'll have to document your hack beyond doubt. If developpers lives are destroyed by bad code, the bad code is not the problem but the lack of healthy boundaries is.

    • @-Jason-L
      @-Jason-L Před 2 lety

      @@harry356 many of us consider "the right way" to include enhancing readability. Refactor for clarity and expressing intent

    • @harry356
      @harry356 Před 2 lety

      @@-Jason-L generally I agree with that and is also how I work. But I think there are exceptions to this where "doing it right" adds complexity and makes it more difficult to maintain (while technically the more superior solution). So sometimes I just settle for "this will do for now". I also want to deliver. It's not always that you need to extend code, sometimes the simple solution is good enough.

  • @innomin8251
    @innomin8251 Před 3 lety +36

    Dude, I can totally related to Point 1 immediately. I've been a software engineer for ~ 17 years at this point. Last year, in the middle of COVID-19, I had major concentration problems at work, and eventually saw someone. I have ADHD. Probably did since childhood. I've worked pretty well in office environments for a long time, and the doctor said between self-medication through caffeine and the structure of physically going *to* work, I was managing the symptoms. When my job went fully remote because of the pandemic, those coping mechanisms weren't enough any more.

    • @xshortguy
      @xshortguy Před 3 lety +2

      This also describes me. I should get checked for ADHD.

    • @lukasmajerik6439
      @lukasmajerik6439 Před 3 lety +17

      ADHD has everybody => it's not illness => it's absence of focus => focus is hard => train focus. My story - after telling my mind last 6 months, don't think about this, that, it's not important, I have got much better. And yeah, you tube is devil. Watch only on what you have decided, when youtube is off, otherwise, it will drawn you in itself for hours. Have a nice day sir.

    • @ilikemyodds1
      @ilikemyodds1 Před 2 lety

      @@lukasmajerik6439 agreed

    • @gebys4559
      @gebys4559 Před 2 lety

      @@lukasmajerik6439 it's not illnes for you, but try working with a kid that has a snap focus period of 7s and you are unable to even consider a behavioural therapy without pharmacological help.

  • @daniel71626
    @daniel71626 Před 3 lety

    Good one, I understand your points. And there is a lot of miscomunication in SWE as well. That is a skill as well.

  • @Jonathan_Henderson
    @Jonathan_Henderson Před 3 lety +1

    Another brilliant video! I hope to become as good of a content creator as you

  • @whoisprimuschi
    @whoisprimuschi Před 3 lety

    Thank for your video. It is not only a habit that you say about "to study and grow in programming at beginning of 2 or 3 years", also it motivates me due to my job is temporary closed by the political inconsistence "Myanmar".

  • @user-ik8pk5ll5f
    @user-ik8pk5ll5f Před rokem

    Thank you for such useful tips 🙂

  • @harry356
    @harry356 Před 2 lety

    Very cool! Nice to learn that I do most of these.

  • @timstevens3361
    @timstevens3361 Před 2 lety +1

    some of my most productive days
    i dont even turn the computer on !!!
    these are idea days.
    i create an idea of what i want.
    i create an idea of how to implement it.
    i dont need to be anywhere near a computer for these steps
    and sometimes this is half of the work.
    then i start writing code.
    then i test it.
    rinse and repeat.

  • @joeygarcia7826
    @joeygarcia7826 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent list! When you said all good programmers have some form of ADD, I laughed out loud. It is true! Finding the right time to figure stuff out is different from I know what has to be done, and I just need time to write all the. The former, I save for my prime time best focus time. Really good noise cancelling headphones is a good investment!

  • @pablohernandez4305
    @pablohernandez4305 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this video, interesting habits I need to practice some

  • @hanscarlsson7276
    @hanscarlsson7276 Před 2 lety +26

    I have been developing software solutions for 40 years now. These are a few more traits that I think make a good developer:
    1. A genuine desire to really understand the problem that the customer/user experiences and find a solution to that problem. The solution might not even be to develop a piece of software.
    2. The ability to communicate solutions and ideas in a clear and understandable way to other people.
    3. The ability to document and describe the implemented solution so that others may further develop and maintain the solution. No one lives forever.

  • @melvinlovejones9722
    @melvinlovejones9722 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for sharing this.

  • @edwardgonzalez6331
    @edwardgonzalez6331 Před 3 lety +2

    This is a very helpful video.

  • @anaedwards6451
    @anaedwards6451 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for sharing the knowledge man

  • @robertreeve8365
    @robertreeve8365 Před 2 lety

    YEAH, really good video and thank you!
    super valuable

  • @sagingaliy.6126
    @sagingaliy.6126 Před 3 lety

    thank you for advices!

  • @victorromeo949
    @victorromeo949 Před 3 lety +38

    First here, love from Kenya 🇰🇪

  • @NIC_Pineiro
    @NIC_Pineiro Před 2 lety

    I really liked this video. My role is in basic level 1 help desk and i been pursuing networking for a while now but its been getting difficult to stay motivated. I like how you said to pursue your interest. I think I might just go down the python rabbit hole

  • @spaceghost7807
    @spaceghost7807 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this.

  • @JenKumar
    @JenKumar Před 3 lety

    I have been watching a few of your videos today and am really enjoying them! Thank you for taking time to share this invaluable wisdom! I have a question- do you have a video no or insight into how to communicate status updates to stakeholders for impact? What should be in the status besides the typical formula of what I did yestserday, what I am doing today, and and any problems faced? Thank you!

  • @doaashafik3073
    @doaashafik3073 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for your video,
    Its cool

  • @claraharmonson2181
    @claraharmonson2181 Před 2 lety

    Excellent video! My ADHD and I are doing a happy dance 🎉🎉🎉

  • @xoangelesxo8791
    @xoangelesxo8791 Před 3 lety +4

    2 habits that I have picked up since starting my coding journey are I am unafraid of asking for help to unblock myself, and I rubberduck waaaaaay to much 😃

  • @porky1118
    @porky1118 Před 3 lety

    I'm also not good at focusing on something. But when I'm really motivated, I can focus on something until it's finished, no matter how long it takes.

  • @haSHAH1
    @haSHAH1 Před 3 lety

    your videos help a ton

  • @BulletTheEnforcer
    @BulletTheEnforcer Před 3 lety

    Thank you, especially for that last comment.

  • @donblack1571
    @donblack1571 Před 2 lety

    Very good video. 🙏🏽

  • @holdir
    @holdir Před 2 lety

    interesting tips, thanks for sharing

  • @anshuman.tiwari
    @anshuman.tiwari Před 2 lety

    Thank you sir from my heart

  • @hesoom9245
    @hesoom9245 Před 3 lety

    so helpful thank you

  • @onemoremagistr
    @onemoremagistr Před 2 lety

    Thank you!

  • @shareemteofilo6257
    @shareemteofilo6257 Před 3 lety

    Awesome tips!

  • @bboylorettoEight08
    @bboylorettoEight08 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the tips mayn

  • @rafaelrico
    @rafaelrico Před rokem

    Your speak form is so good. I understand your english. Your voice is agradable.

  • @the_oneironaut
    @the_oneironaut Před 3 lety

    Great video!

  • @FlaviusAspra
    @FlaviusAspra Před 2 lety

    Focus: yes, for senior.
    For team lead+, add on top: ability to change focus, but really keep sharp focus on the new thing.
    For explaining: I'm a CTO and I think explaining everything I was learning on forum was key to getting here. I started basically 1 year after starting to learn programming, and continued for 10 years very intensively. I still do it. 15yoe.

  • @miatribe
    @miatribe Před 3 lety +5

    "Train to focus"... here I am at working watching this video.

  • @harmonicresonanceproject

    I found this really useful.

  • @5kr3aminMunk33
    @5kr3aminMunk33 Před 3 lety +5

    ADHD can help you stay on track, gotta use that hyper focus to your advantage

  • @allis-kc3jv
    @allis-kc3jv Před 3 lety

    great video!

  • @DevotionalDigest
    @DevotionalDigest Před 3 lety

    Enjoyed this video. Thanks for sharing.

  • @bigblessed4732
    @bigblessed4732 Před rokem

    Thank you🙏

  • @GiulianoViale
    @GiulianoViale Před 3 lety +1

    Great video! Greetings from argentina