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Has anyone here studied programming/computing at university?

If so, what programming languages were you taught and what was the experience like? Did the course focus on something specific, like web development? If not, do you want to/wish you did?

4th Jul 2017, 11:29 PM
Shannon
Shannon - avatar
8 Answers
+ 1
I studied at University of Phoenix. I learned html, CSS, DTD, and Java. We used dreamweaver, photoshop, and a few others that I don't recall at this time. The Degree I earned was a bachelors in Multi-Visual Communications. What that translates to... To me it translates to web development, but for it to be truly useful, I could have used a few additional programming languages, such as JavaScript, .net, C#, and C++. Of course no matter how many languages you learn, it seems that the available jobs always want one more that I don't have or is advertising itself as entry level, but wants 2 to 4 years of experience anyway. Go figure. Sorry, I didn't mention the experience. After the second person to say, "I don't know, what do you think we should do?", I realized that to ensure that I got decent grades, that I had to keep our team projects organized and on track. After that, my classes were so much easier. Though I expect that I would have come to the same conclusion, no matter what school I attended or what classes I took. I did eventually come across another student who was willing and able to help with that.
5th Jul 2017, 12:51 AM
EWiles
EWiles - avatar
+ 3
I'm currently a University student and majoring into Computer Science; programming. The University has switched over to Python as recent as last year because grasping the fundamentals is far easier than any of the other languages. It has enough high level abstraction and enough complexity to allow students to then go into other languages in year 2. For example, I will have to become an expert in Java, C++, and 1 other one in year 2. It sounds hard, but since I've learned python, it comes very easily. Of course there are other languages being taught here for web development, but you actually don't really go into those until 2nd/3rd year unless you take a smaller degree and go directly into it. For web development they focus on html (html5), CSS, and PHP. I don't know much more than that unfortunately.
5th Jul 2017, 1:09 AM
Sapphire
+ 3
it's quite easy to grasp other languages once you master one. Please kindly follow back @shannon
6th Jul 2017, 4:40 PM
Elvis Ngboki
Elvis Ngboki - avatar
+ 3
How have you been?
15th Mar 2019, 3:02 PM
Walimohammad Rohani
Walimohammad Rohani - avatar
+ 2
Hi
9th Feb 2019, 7:24 PM
Walimohammad Rohani
Walimohammad Rohani - avatar
+ 1
@sapphire You said you have to become an expert in 3 languages next year. Can you please define what being an expert is.
5th Jul 2017, 2:00 AM
Code101
Code101 - avatar
+ 1
@code101 Meaning I know how to write what I want in those languages. So all the fundamentals. It sounds hard but I haven't had trouble so far learning java. it's basically the same but more typing. I'm serious. Once you learn one language it becomes easier because you ask yourself (how do I make a loop, or if condition in this language).
5th Jul 2017, 2:15 AM
Sapphire
0
hi Code101 ! I read your comment somewhere that if someone need good & free course that you've from udemy,coursera etc then do contact me I need of some good JavaScript & Angular2 courses if you have?
24th Aug 2017, 5:20 PM
waqas