I am currently working on a project that involves drag and drop, socket and other stuff not covered in odin. This will be my final project. It means that I will be skipping photo tagging and chat app because imo these projects are too common and photo tagging is pretty simplistic.
Hey, thank you man that was a really inspiring story. I'm currently going through TOP Javascript section and then I want to do the React section, however and this is obviously a personal matter but I'm also working full time so it's tough. I have one leg out of my current job and one leg still in the office. I'm not sure what to do. Congrats on your success!
alright mate thanks for the content its really giving me inspiration and motivation my question is if im using chat gtp to look up the functions and bits of code i need and following TH-cam tutorials but changing the function names ect.. but am i still learning? or am i cheating im working on pseudo code if that helps.
@@AshRodders-vg6xw I think when you start out you should never take code from ChatGPT. You should write the code purely by yourself. You can use gpt to help you understand concepts but never to give you code.
@@self_taught_dev i think this is where ive gone wrong i thought i understood the concepts but as soon as im in the code editor i have to look up what im trying to do, i know this sounds stupid but are ou meant to know what to code by reading or can i use google and w3 schools ect? thanks for your time aswel if i could get half as good as you id be chuffed!
What would you recommend for a beginner starting with Ruby on Rails? Based on your experience, is The Odin Project one of the top tutorials you've encountered?
@@self_taught_dev Thanks. I'll certainly explore that soon. Right now, I'm completely absorbed in "Learn Ruby the Hard Way" by Zed Shaw. Its interactive and repetitive approach really helps in familiarizing oneself with the programming concepts.
@@blessioz hey I spent a solid 4 to 5 hours a day at that time. Any more than that and I felt like I would eventually burn out. I also only completed up to the end of the Rails path and then I found an internship.
I am currently working on a project that involves drag and drop, socket and other stuff not covered in odin. This will be my final project. It means that I will be skipping photo tagging and chat app because imo these projects are too common and photo tagging is pretty simplistic.
Sounds like a good project to show some more technical competence. Happy coding!
@@self_taught_dev yeah true. I feel like the last 3 projects in node path are really common and everyone is building it.
Hey, thank you man that was a really inspiring story. I'm currently going through TOP Javascript section and then I want to do the React section, however and this is obviously a personal matter but I'm also working full time so it's tough. I have one leg out of my current job and one leg still in the office. I'm not sure what to do. Congrats on your success!
It's ideal that you keep your current job until you land another so that you have income! Keep grinding, it's a marathon not a sprint at TOP.
do you have a video talking about the project you made?
@@CB-xp9ew yes there’s one short video on the pet rescue app in my videos but I should make an update on that
alright mate thanks for the content its really giving me inspiration and motivation my question is if im using chat gtp to look up the functions and bits of code i need and following TH-cam tutorials but changing the function names ect.. but am i still learning? or am i cheating im working on pseudo code if that helps.
@@AshRodders-vg6xw I think when you start out you should never take code from ChatGPT. You should write the code purely by yourself. You can use gpt to help you understand concepts but never to give you code.
@@self_taught_dev i think this is where ive gone wrong i thought i understood the concepts but as soon as im in the code editor i have to look up what im trying to do, i know this sounds stupid but are ou meant to know what to code by reading or can i use google and w3 schools ect? thanks for your time aswel if i could get half as good as you id be chuffed!
@@AshRodders-vg6xw you just have to start small and do lots of reps on projects that get bigger and bigger. I recommend the Odin project.
What would you recommend for a beginner starting with Ruby on Rails? Based on your experience, is The Odin Project one of the top tutorials you've encountered?
Yes I would do the Odin project Ruby module (I skipped the last 3 projects of Ruby) then do their Rails module thoroughly.
@@self_taught_dev Thanks. I'll certainly explore that soon. Right now, I'm completely absorbed in "Learn Ruby the Hard Way" by Zed Shaw. Its interactive and repetitive approach really helps in familiarizing oneself with the programming concepts.
Quick question: which platforms did you use for your job search? And were they completely free?
@@MitukaBwanausi LinkedIn was the most lucrative for me
@@MitukaBwanausi yes for sure! The Odin Project is a great way to learn rails and also the basic of the web including HTML, JavaScript and also Ruby.
when you quit job to fully focus on the odin project, how much time or hours you give per day consistantly so that you could complete in 8 months.
@@blessioz hey I spent a solid 4 to 5 hours a day at that time. Any more than that and I felt like I would eventually burn out. I also only completed up to the end of the Rails path and then I found an internship.
@@self_taught_dev is it your self learning or also had some assistance from some programmer.?
@@Dev-gq5hn now are you doing job as fullstack ?
@@blessioz I was completely self taught and yes I am full stack right now
Hi, Ben
Are you still on RoR or some other technology?
Still using Rails and don’t intend to stop!