G
G
greensizo2017-10-08 21:43:39
IT education
greensizo, 2017-10-08 21:43:39

In short, a schoolboy, grade 9, I want to be a programmer. I'm learning the basics. But with mathematics and physics, well, very tight. What to do? Or is uni not needed?

In short, a schoolboy, grade 9. I want to be a programmer. I'm learning the basics. But with mathematics and physics, well, very tight. What to do? How to act? Or is uni not needed?

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

9 answer(s)
⚡ Kotobotov ⚡, 2017-10-08
@angrySCV

if you can’t master mathematics in the 9th grade, then being a programmer is definitely not for you.
either you learn to solve problems (not only in mathematics), or you join the ranks of sales managers for some shit.

P
Ptolemy_master, 2017-10-08
@Ptolemy_master

And what does "tight with mathematics and physics" mean? Do not understand? Or not interested? You can't get into a university as a programmer without knowledge of these subjects.
When I needed to, I myself prepared for these subjects. I just took the books "Mathematics for Applicants" and "Physics for Applicants" and passed both of them. You can do it differently. Take physics textbooks from the 6th (or 7th grade, I don’t know which one they teach now), and read them, solve problems. There is nothing magical or super complicated in these items, you just don’t need to skip incomprehensible places, but you need to chew them with all your might.

B
borisovdenis, 2017-10-08
@borisovdenis

Dude, stop getting upset with the fact that something does not work out with mathematics and physics. Of course, these items would be better understood, because. forms, albeit not directly algorithmically / programmerly, but analytical thinking for sure! To see whether you can program or not, you can solve problems "A" on codeforces.com/, it is also extremely useful. About the university, it’s better to go to an IT specialty, because. when you cook in this environment for several years, it’s still badly poor, and your horizons expand. And being a programmer is constantly learning something new, that's for sure! Those. if you want to become a programmer, you need to learn how to learn, and have a constant desire to develop and learn, learn, learn, screw, screw, screw!

G
Griboks, 2017-10-08
@Griboks

Hire a tutor if you're dumb. Read the textbook if a normal person. The first option, if you just need answers to the exam and all that. The second is if you want to learn something.

H
Henry, 2017-10-08
@Henryh

In the work of a programmer, tasks often come across, the solution of which requires the development of a whole layer of technologies (it happened). Many books are thicker than math textbooks. Working as a programmer - you need to constantly learn, the amount of knowledge needed for a project sometimes exceeds the years of schooling - and they must be mastered in a short time.
So here's your first programming challenge - prepare for your exams. If this task is not within your power, then it is better to think about other professions.
ps Over the years of work, most of the mathematics was not needed, but the ability to solve mathematical problems is priceless.

L
l1ttl3_h0rse, 2017-10-09
@l1ttl3_h0rse

Not understanding math and physics in 9th grade but wanting to be a programmer is weird. For starters, if I were you, I would wonder if you are any good at logic, which is so necessary in programming. Maybe you should do something else, because programming is endless learning and you can't even master 9th grade stuff. I myself am a ninth grader now, but I don’t have any problems with these subjects at all, given that I study in math. lyceum. I calmly went through almost all the material of the last (8) class myself, because. I was absent for six months due to illness. And, to be honest, I don’t see anything difficult in repeating the entire curriculum from grade 5 to 9 as a whole (and you need it, since it’s “tight” for you), because all the school knowledge given during this period is extremely primitive. And, most importantly,
Personally, I just took the textbook and read, well, sometimes googled topics that I didn't understand. Maybe Foxford textbooks will help you or something like that. In general, I do not see anything difficult in repetition. It is strange that you even asked this question here (because a million similar questions have already been asked).

B
Bjornie, 2017-10-09
@Bjornie

While you are still a schoolboy, there are still 3 years before graduation - study. Pull up mathematics and other matters while there is an opportunity (it will be later, but the time and price of this may be different). If you go into development seriously, then you will understand it yourself (maybe not even in the next 5-10 years). If you are offered a million (metaphorically knowledge), which you will use in a few years, which will bring you dividends, then do not refuse. Otherwise, you can refuse both a million and dividends.

A
Alexander, 2017-10-09
@TemperOK

Grade 9 After school, you play tanks or dota, and in the evening you run around girls or with boys in football / beer. Who in the 9th grade thinks about programming and where to go?

M
Maxim Fedorov, 2017-10-09
@Maksclub

I pulled up a classmate in the 11th grade. But the truth is, he took on himself, in the last year, but he took it himself.
They did entrance exams together at the university and I helped, but then the guy began to study well ...
The main thing is to take it and figure it out.
It will not work to score (this is not the way at all). Because the explanation of the task for some even sites implies such a branching of conditions that any most difficult task in the textbook (and as far as I remember there were none) rests. Score once, then you’ll score too ... but you haven’t figured out how the code works and okay ...
Anyway, mathematics is needed in order to think "forward" ...

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question