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Constantine2014-06-02 22:17:44
Programming
Constantine, 2014-06-02 22:17:44

Who started programming at the age of 20 and older?

I have a question for people who started programming at the age of twenty, were you able to start programming at such a late age to succeed i.e. find a high paying job? The question is primarily addressed to system and application programmers.
This question interests me because I often hear opinions that at the age of 20 it’s too late to start learning programming (they say nothing good will come of you). I have been studying C ++ for 7 months now, while I studied the basic level without STL, I recently took up Qt and discrete mathematics will start studying algorithms in the near future. Do you think it's worth it or is it better to do something else?

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26 answer(s)
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Yuri Lobanov, 2014-06-02
@iiil

I got my first computer at the age of 19. I think you have a chance )
upd Inspired by @Mintormo
's answer I already see messages on the children's forums: Hello, my baby is already 6 months old. Is it too late to give it to programming?

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Mikhail Alekseev, 2014-06-02
@Fandorin

I have a friend who, at the age of 40, started developing websites on Ruby On Rails (before that he had never worked in IT at all), found a good job, he is happy with everything) Everything is in your hands!

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Timur, 2014-06-05
@timych

I am now 34. At 31, I went to college without even understanding what programming is and what programmers do. A few days ago I defended myself perfectly. I have been working as a Java programmer for the second year and am no longer a junior :). So everything is possible. I would like your 20 years :) And about the fact that the material at this age is absorbed worse, yes - the truth is regrettable.

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Mintormo, 2014-06-02
@Mintormo

1. People, you have already fallen from the oak. Those were discussions "Isn't it too late to start at 40?", then at 30, now 20. Will we start from kindergarten soon? It's never too late. There would be a desire. There are often problems with this.
2.

Do you think it's worth it or is it better to do something else?

You can only answer this for yourself. Try and find out. If you are interested, you can try. No - look for something else.

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Sergey, 2014-06-02
@begemot_sun

You say that as if you are going to a ballet to dance pirouettes. Everything is simpler here - do you have a head on your shoulders? there is a desire? Everything else will follow.

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afiskon, 2014-06-04
@afiskon

This is a lie. 20 years is the time to say. Regarding the question of where to start and all that, see for example tynts .

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agee, 2014-06-05
@agee

In fact, it is during adolescence that the brain most actively forms neural connections. So from 13 to 20 years old, any material is absorbed many times faster than in another period of a person’s life. Programming, playing any kind of sport and learning to play the saxophone should start the sooner the better.
What at seventeen you will master in a week, at twenty-five you will torment for a month. And this is not my fantasy, but a scientific fact.
Therefore, no matter what you undertake, you need to start right now. If you are twenty - do not wait for twenty-five, if you are twenty-five - do not wait for thirty.
Another thing is posing the question "... or is it better to do something else?"
If such doubts, then the answer is ready: yes, it is better to do something else. A profession should be chosen according to the call of the heart, and not because it was advised by others.

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Trow_eu, 2014-06-03
@Trow_eu

I studied at st. a school with a few kids who wereted their little toys, and one even worked remotely for a reputable firm and made good money at an age when it's generally forbidden.
Against their background, I got it into my head that this is a lifestyle and a way of thinking, and you need to start at the age of 10, so I chose a different path for myself (I didn’t really rush). At 23, I gave up on my previous job, for which I studied, etc., began to look for myself, took up this or that, the third, reached the design of printing, then web design (I don’t know how to draw / visualize / be creative at all, I armed myself with good taste and painstaking inefficient work ), then a full cycle of creating very modest sites, now I’m trying to abandon the design, since I need to raise it very much, at the same time raise my layout and front-end skills, and I’d rather focus on what comes easier to me and brings more pleasure .
sometimes it seems to me that I wasted a lot of time, if I chose the web right away, today I would be an experienced pro, not a Ukrainian Hindu. but I learned a lot of interesting things, tried myself in many areas, reached good heights in academic activities by profession, also worked very successfully, although only for a year (accounting. I left due to a strong connection with legislation, and I plan to live in different countries) .
IMHO, if you don't already have people who depend on your salary and you feel like you want to try something - try it! and never regret wrong attempts, every action gives us experience.
PS: I'm still 23, the year was VERY eventful, but I sort of decided and now I more or less know where to go =)

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InstaRobot, 2014-06-08
@InstaRobot

It's never too late to start programming! I started around 27 years old and have been doing it to this day! Do not listen to anyone, late or not late - the main thing is your desire!

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Andriy Garkin, 2014-06-04
@andregarkin

20 is definitely not too late to start. However, interest and inclinations for programming appear earlier, it does not even depend on the presence of a computer. For example, I was interested in the very idea of ​​\u200b\u200ba "thinking machine". Books, calculators and manuals for them, mathematics were interesting. In short - this is a techie mindset that needs to be noticed.
At the age of 11, I fell into the hands of the book "Mouse-software in the country of computer science." She seemed very interesting to me. But then I still had no idea about the profession of a programmer, and for many years I had no ambitions to do it professionally.
And dumb to comprehend something new - will always be.
The fear of an avalanche of new information will never leave you, because the need to learn and develop does not disappear in this profession over time. Otherwise, you will have to leave.

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Alexey Zakharov, 2014-09-20
@Zakhar0v

as noted above, learning to program is akin to learning how to drive a car/bike, it's never too late.
And anyone can be taught. Really anyone. But it is the programmer who will become the one who has the appropriate mindset. Who really needs it.
Moreover, the word "necessary" does not mean the desire to earn, namely the physical need. There are people who write poetry, purely for the soul .. Well, that's almost the same thing.
And it does not depend on age.

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Pavel Solovyov, 2014-06-02
@pavel_salauyou

it's never too late to start programming, I know 2 people who, after 27 years, started to fail, but this is in the field of the web and now there are work norms

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pythonkun, 2014-06-03
@pythonkun

If you are curious, then look at what age (on average) in the West I get a / o. Life begins after 30 =)

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Misha Vasilyev, 2014-06-03
@vasilyev

I'm 28, I've been programming as a means of earning a living since I was 27. Before that, I studied at school, attended a circle and did a little under-site at the university (still ashamed).
I am very glad that a year and a half ago I decided to change the field of activity.

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Artem, 2014-06-03
@Properrr

Are you asking this question because you are unsure of yourself?
Fuck!! We found a vacancy for ourselves (+- what I would like to start with), looked at the requirements, you can even write and talk in more detail about those. requirements, made a development plan for themselves and go ...
Learning a language is easy (it's just like a primer), the main task is to learn to program. When you understand (agree) with the idea that a programmer is not a person who knows and knows how to use the tools of a particular language well, BUT THE ONE who knows WHAT and WHEN to use to solve a specific problem, given time, effort, resources, quality, speed. ..

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psyLik, 2014-06-08
@psyLik

I'm 24, going to university this summer "Development of software and information systems." I already have a high school (economy), I earn quite good money. I want to do what I always wanted to do, but at one time I chose something else. Even if you have to go for a decrease in salary. So, by my own example, I will say that if you want, it is never too late.

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Vladislav, 2014-06-04
@Hateman31

Programming is like driving a car. Is it too late to learn to drive after 20?

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asd111, 2014-06-04
@asd111

If you understand what and where you need to write in order to get the desired result, then everything is Ok. Don't worry about age.

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Voucik, 2014-06-06
@Voucik

You have to love programming. For if you like it, then you will do it, regardless of age. And judging by your writings, you are just looking for profit in this (well, like programmers make cool money). Otherwise, you would not ask such stupid questions, but would study it further without paying attention to age.

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s0ci0pat, 2014-06-03
@s0ci0pat

My teacher (humanities) started at 50.

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Ivan Lemeshev, 2014-06-04
@johnroyzreit

It is never too late to start programming or start any other business, if your goal is not money, but you are interested in doing this, you like this business and you will improve in this business every day, then you will definitely succeed regardless of age, gender, education, place residence, etc.
I started doing professional programming at the age of 25 (I don’t have a special education in this area, although I got a technical tower in another area, and at that time I was practically a complete zero in programming), now I have been doing this for 2 years, I see how my level and, accordingly, salary (at first I was paid a penny), I continue to develop daily and gain experience, I'm interested)

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Kostya Bodnya, 2014-06-04
@q_styler

Even before school, I used to program at the university with my dad at Iskra.

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Andry Shepard, 2014-06-04
@noskriptt

up to 21 studied Linux and *NIX systems. Now I'm 24 programming. everything is cool, so far 3 languages ​​are enough for automation and routine administrator tasks. I mainly program under Linux and *NIX systems.

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Dmitry Aitkulov, 2014-06-05
@Scarfase1989

Do this further if this business brings you pleasure and spiritual satisfaction, and as you become more or less a specialist there, your salary will become good

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Bushizzle, 2014-06-06
@Bushizzle

He studied journalism, worked as a photographer, became a frontend. It's never too late.

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Ivan Why Do You Know, 2021-09-11
@MakeUPMan87

I've been a programmer in my 30s, I've read the book HTML Basics. Learned to build frames. Then I read a few CSS Basics sheets! I made styles for the built layout from kakkas, I visualized, exactly what I wanted. And I didn’t understand enough yet, you need to use interactive. I flipped through the YouTube pages a little, and voila! Also don't forget :hover on click, on hover. And in 6 months I earned, without straining, 25+k. But laziness came, I abandoned it, I like to code, fool, recreate layout masterpieces, I'm really cool! But now, in 2 years, Kodin's technique has changed, now they don't pay attention to trifles, when hovering on a button, except for :hover, but what about :active, when pressed, when the user releases the mouse button! Something like this!

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