Hi..I am working into a different domain for the last 4 years since my graduation from my engineering. So please guide me how can I learn coding easily and get into a good software development job?Is there any scope for me to get into Development job now?
So I’m new to all of this and I’m taking a free online course through App Academy. They’re teaching me Ruby, SQL, Rails, JavaScript, React, MERN stack, Docker, GraphQL, and Data Structures and Algorithms. Are these goods sticks to learn if I wanna work at one of the gang companies? I love the the Bay Area( Silicon Valley) if that helps.
1. Learn Right Stack (c#) 2. Get a Coach to keep you on track 3. Build Software that Solves a business problem (use database) 4. Interview for tech job 5. Work with recruiting firm ❤ thank you @Coder Foundry
@@abidhasansnigdho i know i'm many months late but... better to watch the whole video. he doesn't waste time throughout his explanation, and some of the listed points may be taken out of context. cheers
If you choose to learn COBOL today when trying to break in you’re only handicapping yourself. When for every 30-40 C# jobs there is one COBOL job (and a lot of senior positions) why would you hurt your chances?
I swear this dude could teach anything and I'd actually pay attention. He explains everything in a very basic way. I'm 15 and have started to learn c#. I already got into html, css, JavaScript, SQL,PHP,etc everything needed for front end and back end. I decided to start to specialize in c# because of this channel. It is so much more useful than any other
Google Interviewer: Given two strings and an integer, write a function that returns true if the edit distance between these two strings is less than or equal to the integer. Me: .........So have I told you about this awesome project I've been working on?
4:25 Step 1: Choose the right programming stack 7:50 Step 2: Get a Coach to keep you on track 11:02 Step 3: Build Software that Solves a business problem (use database) 15:09 Step 4: Interview for tech job 15:20 Step 5. Work with recruiting firm
Step 2 is so relatable to me, i think if i get coach i can get over my laziness and evolve as a software developer by following the coach's instructions and steps.
16:55 Shift the interview from code trivia to explaining the code in your portfolio 18:30 Ask what kinds of projects they are building (asking about the job)
only knowing the web development would help to get job. what about algorithm and proper understanding of data structure? can you give resources/information about those too?
@@CoderFoundry Thanks for the swift reply! I'm looking forward to that!I'm from the Philippines by the way. I recently found out that there's more demand for .NET Developers here and so I'm looking for a good curriculum for a .NET Full Stack. I will definitely keep an eye on your offering next year.
What if you're an older developer who has worked dev jobs long ago, was out of the industry for a while, now trying to get back in? Do I still look for entry level? Am I too old (44) for bootcamps? I have general programming experience and the desire to learn but it seems like between overseas competition and 20-year-old bootcamp grads I'm too old to break back in. Is it true the employers are willing to have you learn on the job in the newer skills if you have all the background and professional experience? I also am looking more for contract work at this stage of my career.
There are not enough software developers world wide. So learning to code is something you should look into. Especially since you already have experience. Switching from vb or vb.net should not be too hard for you. Start with a c# online class and see how you do. Then if that goes well look into other learning options like bootcamps and see if that is an option.
@@CoderFoundry Thanks for replying. I'm an old school VB developer. My experience is in Access VBA, Visual Basic, SQL Server. I'm just beginning to learn C# and get object-oriented experience now. I'm used to procedural programming and thinking OO has been a struggle. I looked into bootcamps but the tuition is out of my range and I need to be working very soon, I'd sooner take on an entry-level position and work my way up while I get experience in the language. I keep hearing that employers are willing to take on programmers with experience and raw skills and have them learn on the job. But I haven't found that to be true. When applying to coder jobs I just hear crickets. I'll see a job description where they are looking for someone who can do everything under the sun. I don't think I stand a chance applying for those jobs even if some of those skills are "preferred." What I'm hoping to do is to find some contract work, simple stuff to start out and teach myself using online courses on the side.
@@CoderFoundry I am trying to teach myself C# through online classes right now as you suggested. I think bootcamps sound great but they seem to be made for college age people who can still live with their parents for a few more years while they get a foothold. I need to be working now and the tuition is unthinkable. I'd gladly take an online/remote part time contract/internship type situation and work my way up, a "re-entry level" position so to speak :)
Where as this video is 2 years old, is writing a bug tracker still viable to solving a problem and getting a job? I start coding bootcamp in 2 weeks and just want to keep these tips in mind.
if you don't already know the exact technologies a company uses, they won't train you. and there is no "industry standard" set of things to learn either. oh, and you won't learn it in a CS degree. i've learned from my job search that companies do NOT want to train you. at all.
So that is a tough question today because we are in the middle of a transition between the frameworks. If you are embarking on a new project the obvious answer is .NET Core. At Coder Foundry we are still teaching .NET MVC 5. Why? Because of the majority of employers still using MVC 5 for projects. However, that will change for us in 2020. We will be teaching .NET Core 3 using Visual Studio 2019. So if you are starting out learning today. I would lean towards .NET Core because the Microsoft examples will be written using Core. There are differences in the between how MVC is implemented not mention they also threw in Razor Pages. Bottom Line. Learn using MVC Core today. If you get a job with that has MVC 5 you will find the transition easier to the older framework.
Great content, but the main reason i think this channel it’s not going to growth that fast it’s because of the insane amount of ads that you guy put in your videos. If you are using this youtube channel as a atraction to your bootcamp, then it makes no sense that you do this. This channel should be the part of the atraction step in the funnel marketing. Not the main source of income.
Thanks for the feedback Tomás. We’re just doing what the norm is on TH-cam with reference to ads. I think one or two are an acceptable amount on a video. It’s not where we’re looking to make a big profit - our goal is to genuinely help those learning to code (both that can and cannot attend our bootcamp).
Coder Foundry: _...and that means that recruiting firm pays the fee. This DOESN'T reduce your salary..._ My Brain: _I wasn't worried about the reduction of my salary but now that you mentioned it, I'm starting to get a little suspicious._
Don't be. I was just point a common misunderstanding about how recruiters work. So still work with them you will find more opportunities and get hired faster
Is it somewhat contradictory? You are telling folks to keep away from and not waste their time on online courses. Instead you encourage them to seek "immersive learning." Yet, if someone does not ace your entrance exam, they are directed to your online course.🤯
We do have a standard but most schools will take anyone and they would sign you up for an ISA or loan. We are not like that. We try our best to be a good actor in the space. So we make judgement calls based on our dev quiz and sometimes we reccomend a self paced option for applicants. Which is lower cost and less risk for the student.
@@CoderFoundry I am by no means knocking your standard. However, from the way you describe things it does come across as if you are indeed knocking the quality of an online option, while at the same time directing folks to your online course who do not meet your boot camp's entrance standard.
Request a Coder Foundry syllabus: www.coderfoundry.com/syllabus
Hip cgn
Hi..I am working into a different domain for the last 4 years since my graduation from my engineering. So please guide me how can I learn coding easily and get into a good software development job?Is there any scope for me to get into Development job now?
So I’m new to all of this and I’m taking a free online course through App Academy. They’re teaching me Ruby, SQL, Rails, JavaScript, React, MERN stack, Docker, GraphQL, and Data Structures and Algorithms. Are these goods sticks to learn if I wanna work at one of the gang companies? I love the the Bay Area( Silicon Valley) if that helps.
1. Learn Right Stack (c#)
2. Get a Coach to keep you on track
3. Build Software that Solves a business problem (use database)
4. Interview for tech job
5. Work with recruiting firm
❤ thank you @Coder Foundry
saved my 26 mins. thanks man
Javascript and node will rule the world.
After the java debacle you can't trust these companies who own the language.
@@abidhasansnigdho i know i'm many months late but... better to watch the whole video. he doesn't waste time throughout his explanation, and some of the listed points may be taken out of context.
cheers
C# is the right stack to get a job ... but then again people get jobs coding COBOL lololol
If you choose to learn COBOL today when trying to break in you’re only handicapping yourself.
When for every 30-40 C# jobs there is one COBOL job (and a lot of senior positions) why would you hurt your chances?
I swear this dude could teach anything and I'd actually pay attention. He explains everything in a very basic way. I'm 15 and have started to learn c#. I already got into html, css, JavaScript, SQL,PHP,etc everything needed for front end and back end. I decided to start to specialize in c# because of this channel. It is so much more useful than any other
Thanks Kev. We appreciate the support.
I hope this helps. I really think step 4 is knowledge not widely know. It is worth sticking around for.
So happy that I chose to learn c# and didn't waste the last 6 months of learning
Google Interviewer: Given two strings and an integer, write a function that returns true if the edit distance between these two strings is less than or equal to the integer.
Me: .........So have I told you about this awesome project I've been working on?
Google interviewer: Wait...you have a project? By all means show me...
That actually seems doable tho, but it think that's just a warm up question since I'm able to get it lmao
What do you mean by "edit distance"?
@@Sapphiamur I assume you are joking, but in the case you are not, or anyone else is wondering, here is a link: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edit_distance
@@CoderFoundry But is that realistic though? What if they just say no? What do you do then?
15:05 me who already knows how to print hello world: Stonks📈
4:25 Step 1: Choose the right programming stack
7:50 Step 2: Get a Coach to keep you on track
11:02 Step 3: Build Software that Solves a business problem (use database)
15:09 Step 4: Interview for tech job
15:20 Step 5. Work with recruiting firm
Step 2 is so relatable to me, i think if i get coach i can get over my laziness and evolve as a software developer by following the coach's instructions and steps.
Just like me
16:55 Shift the interview from code trivia to explaining the code in your portfolio
18:30 Ask what kinds of projects they are building (asking about the job)
Very well said and to the point. Best part is how to control the interview (especially when you have an impressive portfolio).
I wish a lot of people knew this, will be updating soon as I get a Soft Dev job.
Love the posters in the background of all your videos
Your videos are unbelievably helpful. Thanks!
Thanks!
only knowing the web development would help to get job. what about algorithm and proper understanding of data structure? can you give resources/information about those too?
this video is a hidden gem!
Thank you so much for this Incredible video mate!
you made my with the intro. Thanks.
Thanks Noman. We have fun making these videos.
🙂
I have a question, does Coder Foundry cater online course/certification for .net full stack?
Currently we are an in person bootcamp. But we have an offering next year.
@@CoderFoundry Thanks for the swift reply! I'm looking forward to that!I'm from the Philippines by the way. I recently found out that there's more demand for .NET Developers here and so I'm looking for a good curriculum for a .NET Full Stack. I will definitely keep an eye on your offering next year.
very inspiring ! thank you!. this video is worth a $100 every second!
Thanks!!!
Thank you! This was helpful. Trilogy bootcamp was an expensive dumpster fire.
You're welcome! Sorry to hear your experience with Trilogy was not what you wanted it to be.
This content is gold
What if you're an older developer who has worked dev jobs long ago, was out of the industry for a while, now trying to get back in? Do I still look for entry level? Am I too old (44) for bootcamps? I have general programming experience and the desire to learn but it seems like between overseas competition and 20-year-old bootcamp grads I'm too old to break back in. Is it true the employers are willing to have you learn on the job in the newer skills if you have all the background and professional experience? I also am looking more for contract work at this stage of my career.
So having experience is a great thing. We have stack changers all the time. What is your experience in?
There are not enough software developers world wide. So learning to code is something you should look into. Especially since you already have experience. Switching from vb or vb.net should not be too hard for you. Start with a c# online class and see how you do. Then if that goes well look into other learning options like bootcamps and see if that is an option.
@@CoderFoundry Thanks for replying. I'm an old school VB developer. My experience is in Access VBA, Visual Basic, SQL Server. I'm just beginning to learn C# and get object-oriented experience now. I'm used to procedural programming and thinking OO has been a struggle. I looked into bootcamps but the tuition is out of my range and I need to be working very soon, I'd sooner take on an entry-level position and work my way up while I get experience in the language. I keep hearing that employers are willing to take on programmers with experience and raw skills and have them learn on the job. But I haven't found that to be true. When applying to coder jobs I just hear crickets. I'll see a job description where they are looking for someone who can do everything under the sun. I don't think I stand a chance applying for those jobs even if some of those skills are "preferred."
What I'm hoping to do is to find some contract work, simple stuff to start out and teach myself using online courses on the side.
@@CoderFoundry I am trying to teach myself C# through online classes right now as you suggested. I think bootcamps sound great but they seem to be made for college age people who can still live with their parents for a few more years while they get a foothold. I need to be working now and the tuition is unthinkable. I'd gladly take an online/remote part time contract/internship type situation and work my way up, a "re-entry level" position so to speak :)
Get a PMP with it and those 20 yrs grad will be your minions
really really grateful to get this knowledge from thank you so much for your help
Your welcome glad we could help.
Where as this video is 2 years old, is writing a bug tracker still viable to solving a problem and getting a job? I start coding bootcamp in 2 weeks and just want to keep these tips in mind.
💯 still checks all the boxes.
if you don't already know the exact technologies a company uses, they won't train you. and there is no "industry standard" set of things to learn either. oh, and you won't learn it in a CS degree. i've learned from my job search that companies do NOT want to train you. at all.
Would a web application that creates bookings for appointments be complex enough? Database for users etc.
Sure.
@@CoderFoundry Thank god for that 😂 and cheers
$15,000 to learn from this guy.
It's actually only $99 a month if you don't want to do the full bootcamp, but want to learn using our curriculum - learn.coderfoundry.com/
Kool stuff! Now I have an idea of what to do for my capstone project! Thanks!!!!!
Glad we could help.
Great video, but i did not understand totally the bug tracker part
Watch this video. th-cam.com/video/oC483DTjRXU/w-d-xo.html
Thank you so much!
Really helpful :) Much appreciated
Kenny, Thanks for the kind words.
"NO MORE $10 COURSES THAT YOU BUY AND NEVER LOOK AT " th-cam.com/video/vV9XK47hY18/w-d-xo.html I feel personally called out by this LMAO
😆😂🤣
Amazing. Thanks for this content.
Thanks for watching!
Syllabus page --> 404 - OOPS...
This page cannot be found. If you need help finding something on our site, email us at
Thanks! Not sure how it was taken down. Back up now :)
what mouse an keyboard is that? O.O
now I understand that you are on a horse when you have a good portfolio.
The beginning was hilarious :v
Really? She thought Ruby was most popular? ...I was hoping you would say Python.
17:10 best 🙏
Thanks!
Hi sir, what do you think about Python?
Good for data science applications.
How often do you speak to that duck in the corner?
That’s Cody, our unofficial CF mascot.
Should i focus on .NET or .NET Core ?
So that is a tough question today because we are in the middle of a transition between the frameworks. If you are embarking on a new project the obvious answer is .NET Core. At Coder Foundry we are still teaching .NET MVC 5. Why? Because of the majority of employers still using MVC 5 for projects. However, that will change for us in 2020. We will be teaching .NET Core 3 using Visual Studio 2019. So if you are starting out learning today. I would lean towards .NET Core because the Microsoft examples will be written using Core. There are differences in the between how MVC is implemented not mention they also threw in Razor Pages.
Bottom Line. Learn using MVC Core today. If you get a job with that has MVC 5 you will find the transition easier to the older framework.
@@bobbydavisjr007 thanks
.Net core for sure.
Great content, but the main reason i think this channel it’s not going to growth that fast it’s because of the insane amount of ads that you guy put in your videos. If you are using this youtube channel as a atraction to your bootcamp, then it makes no sense that you do this. This channel should be the part of the atraction step in the funnel marketing. Not the main source of income.
Thanks for the feedback Tomás. We’re just doing what the norm is on TH-cam with reference to ads. I think one or two are an acceptable amount on a video.
It’s not where we’re looking to make a big profit - our goal is to genuinely help those learning to code (both that can and cannot attend our bootcamp).
It's a 25 minute video, packed with unique advice, with just three ads, Tomas.
@@HashimWarren yeah absolutly! i think i writed this when i was half sleep. I watched it again and it´s not that bad. My apologies
@@rombach1995 redemption arc
@@rombach1995 that's pretty cool of you 👍. I respect that
love it
Thanks Dalton.
I want to talk to u I m a high School passed student and I want a help from u pls
We go live every Monday, Wednesday & Thursday at Noon EST. Show up and ask your question.
knock out? huh get back up?
Can you be my coach on C#.. Pretty Please @coder Foundry
Coder Foundry: _...and that means that recruiting firm pays the fee. This DOESN'T reduce your salary..._
My Brain: _I wasn't worried about the reduction of my salary but now that you mentioned it, I'm starting to get a little suspicious._
Don't be. I was just point a common misunderstanding about how recruiters work. So still work with them you will find more opportunities and get hired faster
@@CoderFoundry hahaha it was just a joke... I certainly didn't expect you to even notice my comment 😄thx
Is it somewhat contradictory? You are telling folks to keep away from and not waste their time on online courses. Instead you encourage them to seek "immersive learning." Yet, if someone does not ace your entrance exam, they are directed to your online course.🤯
We do have a standard but most schools will take anyone and they would sign you up for an ISA or loan. We are not like that. We try our best to be a good actor in the space. So we make judgement calls based on our dev quiz and sometimes we reccomend a self paced option for applicants. Which is lower cost and less risk for the student.
@@CoderFoundry I am by no means knocking your standard. However, from the way you describe things it does come across as if you are indeed knocking the quality of an online option, while at the same time directing folks to your online course who do not meet your boot camp's entrance standard.
Wow what a nice 26 minutes ad. 😑😑😑
If that’s all you got from this then we’re sorry.