@Magikaas Strange... Never seem that. Still, love the direction they're going.
My baby sister is in primary school, is super analytical, loves to play Minecraft. How do I get her interested in real-world programming, and what's the best environment/language to start with?
I personally think that something like Java would be suitable here if you could combine it with her love for minecraft. Writing small minecraft plugins and such
although for beginners, Java may be offputting because of it's strict class-based structure
you'd need to understand what classes are and what they do to do anything in Java, which makes it a little uncomfortable to start off with
@GNi33 The issue I've come across in my attempts to come up with an example is assumed knowledge. What can I present that doesn't come with all the baggage (whether it be html, linux environment, or whatever)
the first days staring at a terminal that gives you some strings and numbers may be fun, after that it gets boring really fast without an actual Interface to look at
@Sippy My counter to that (as non-exhaustive as it is) would be that learning JavaScript first, and adhering to best practices even when I didn't understand them, has lead me to understand the language a whole lot better than colleagues (whom I wholeheartedly respect and deffer to) do.
string.trim() also removes linebreaks at the end of a string, right? According to MDN, it removes whitespace characters at the start and end of a string, but I can't find on MDN what characters are considered whitespace.
I think the best way to get someone like monners sister interested is to play around with stuff that moves. If she's into games like minecraft, try something in canvas (maybe small stuff like making a player move etc. etc.) to get her into programming
BUT I may have missed the point completely here I think. If you just wanna introduce the kid to writing stuff that does stuff, maybe ActionScript is a good way to go.
after that, maybe introduce her to Java and the small OOP-knowledge you need to do basic stuff in it and connect it with Minecraft, make a very basic Minecraft plugin and see how she's interested in that
if she is, you can build on that and get deeper into Java, OOP and its features
@Sippy LOL, no, it really is my sister. And, as to your other point, I don't think we're fundamentally different people, I just took a very roundabout way of arriving at software development.
@GNi33 I agree. Ya need something that gives immediate feedback
lol, honestly, sometimes I think the best things I got out of college were: 1. There's better shit out there for you to learn from 2. Learn to think like a lawyer, even if you're not.
Also, who knew coding was so popular these days?? Haha, my best friend wants me to teach him how to code so he can give up being an electrician and change profession, a bunch of skype friends wanna learn, my little brother wants to learn
@monners True, I also learn a shitload by just sitting in here.
Truth of the matter is that if they aren't compelled to learn on their own then they don't face very positive prospects once they know enough to be employed
Yeah man, but I found that I wasn't compelled to learn until I actually 'got it'
I went to uni to do software engineering cos I knew it'd make me money if I could nail it, but I didn't develop any kinda passion for it until I understood how to solve all the problems I'd be faced with, ya know?
I mean I always looked at coding as a hobby before uni, but always found it too confusing to get started.
Hello people. Would anyone be so kind to recommend a good, free, charting library? Whatever is most popular among the masses is pretty much what I am looking for.
@AbhishekHingnikar That's totally not to say that you don't have a sense of humour. I know for a fact that you troll someguy and me with your indian syntactic vernacular
Ok, we've exhausted my very limited understanding of the German language (which I readily admit is not immediately extensible to the rest of Europe), and so I say... You're all wrong!
@Sippy lol. Good good. You past both the test and the tech stack opinion evaluation (at leat in my book, which honest to good mean absolutely nothing. Seriously, you reading this makes you less employable. Didn't you hear me? STOP! Just go away! I'm literally murdering your career and your family dog right now.)
i see many people using socket.io , but I have to connect to a Java application and I believe it doesn't implement socket.io protocol. Therefore I guess I can not use it for so, can I ?