Conversation started Jan 11, 2015 at 18:04.
Jan 11, 2015 18:04
Hi guys, how do you think, does Java Complete Reference guide by Schildt provide enough knowledge to pass an Oracle Java SE exams?
I have it but I never read it embarrassed
I just try to calculate amount of time that I need to learn language at level enough to pass an exam and get oracle certificate...
fge
fge
@Mike why? Code talks
I fear that I need to read and understand at least a small library. xD.. Or I'm wrong and one book just may be enough
fge
fge
No, a book will never be enough, tens of books will never be enough
You may know ten books by heart, that won't help you connect the dots
Jan 11, 2015 18:08
Yes, sure code talks but certificate may play a good role if u try to get work permission
fge
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And the only way to connect the dots is to code
You want to say that Java is that hard that one book can't cover the key aspects?
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The language in itself is not as easy as C
C is VERY easy
But "key aspects" are a pretty vague notion
You can learn the language in a matter of days
There is no limit to perfection but I guess there must be a fixed amount of "knowledge".
fge
fge
That won't make you a programmer!
Jan 11, 2015 18:13
@fge it isn't...
and I think java is easier than C.
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@Vogel612 yes it is; you don't even have 30 keywords
mostly because you don't have to mess with memory reservation and pointer arithmetics
fge
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What is hard is programming in C
And Oracle Certificate is that hard that only Programmers can pass it?
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The language itself is a piece of cake
Jan 11, 2015 18:14
@fge point taken
ohh messages are in the 20M now?
I didn't even realize...
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@Mike no idea, I don't have any Java programming certificate; I only have an Oracle RDBMS certificate
Certificates? Why don't you go the proper route, learn to code, do code, collaborate code and master code? There's no shortcut to moon. You may have a spacecraft, but people who can fly still gets wherever they want.
Something like this
You'll only find yourself wasting your own time when you go to a desk.
Unihedro, yes I will code and I know how practice is important, but certificate can proof a piece of my knowledge.
fge
fge
Jan 11, 2015 18:17
@Mike but Github projects show even more; as I said: code talks
... Which you have or not? That's my point. Code first.
@Mike The point is; we don't have the certificates because we don't need them. They are only for you.
The proof kicks in itself later.
fge
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I have no diploma but a slew of projects, some of which are successful, even
Guys all of you are absolutely right, I just was about to imagine how hard is to get such a certificate, does it require 10 years of practice or one book will be just enough, that's what I mean
And as I said this certificate can be useful at embassy when u try to get work permission.
fge
fge
Jan 11, 2015 18:18
No idea; but again we all believe you are setting yourself a wrong goal
It depends on how good you are at learning, how much you commit and engage in development, the effort and coffee...
@Mike We don't know since we don't have them
Or need them
Ok I got it, thank you.. Can you please give me a short advice how should I start to work with github? I mean I know what is it in theory but I don't even know how to start work with it and use properly.
I prove my experience with solid experience.
Jan 11, 2015 18:20
YouTube tutorials or there is something better?
Git, Gits or GIT may refer to: == Entertainment == G.I.T. on Broadway, a 1969 live television special Feathers in the Wind, (κΉƒ, pronounced and sometimes transliterated as Git), a 2005 South Korean film Ghost in the Shell, Japanese cyberpunk manga == Language == Git (pronoun), the second-person, dual, personal pronoun (nominative) in Old English Git (slang), British slang for a contemptible person Gitxsan language (ISO 639-3 code: git), a Tsimshianic language of northwestern British Columbia, Canada === Music === Git (album), by Skeletons & The Girl-Faced Boys G.I.T.: Get It Together, ...
And also, what uni said. My teacher got his in 3 months, but he knew another language before and only studied 100% of the time for those months.
wow...
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@Mike if you want work in Java, uh... I have plenty of tasks
@Mike First things first: Never rely on video tutorials unless they are from official sources.
fge
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Jan 11, 2015 18:21
Some of which are not for the faint of heart
"Crash course to Java and OOP" - eternal grave right there
 
Conversation ended Jan 11, 2015 at 18:21.