+ 19

Is loving c++ might affect your level in understanding the language ??

I think that I don't love this language that enough ... I don't love so much all programing languages , thus I find problems in solving or writing programmes ..I had installed this app by a hint from my friend ... and I'm having this obligatory subject in university!!

9th Apr 2017, 8:56 PM
Saja Husam
Saja Husam - avatar
9 Answers
+ 7
I think it matters not how much you love the language, but how much effort you put in to learn it. You can get good at it, but you won't enjoy the learning process, unless you start liking the language. That's just my opinion
9th Apr 2017, 9:36 PM
Eligijus Silkartas
Eligijus Silkartas - avatar
+ 17
I agree with the person I marked his answer as the best answer ... so I will put my back into it to love it then live it , thanks all ..
10th Apr 2017, 3:49 AM
Saja Husam
Saja Husam - avatar
+ 17
thinking virtually in terms of programming !!? what does this mean !!
10th Apr 2017, 9:32 AM
Saja Husam
Saja Husam - avatar
+ 17
@Tarique thanks a lot ... you helped me very very much :)
10th Apr 2017, 2:26 PM
Saja Husam
Saja Husam - avatar
+ 11
I think @SoraKatadzuma's answer summarises everything. If I didn't love C++, I wouldn't be half as proficient as I am now.
10th Apr 2017, 2:59 AM
Hatsy Rei
Hatsy Rei - avatar
+ 9
@x86asm, 1). still love the name, 2). I think it's both. You gotta love the language and put the effort into learning it. Sticking to one language makes you specialized, which is where I'm headed. I love C and I put as much time into learning it as I can. Loving a language has other great side effects. It makes you want to write beautiful, efficient code. It makes you want to do anything and everything, even if people say it is impossible to do it with that language, you'll figure out a way to. It leads you to building large projects like your own language, or a actually useful product for others. And that's where you need the effort too.
10th Apr 2017, 12:00 AM
SoraKatadzuma
SoraKatadzuma - avatar
+ 8
@Saja : It means that you have to think in terms of how compiler works, class, object, primitive memory, lists, sets, hashmap etc.
10th Apr 2017, 9:36 AM
Tarique Khan
Tarique Khan - avatar
+ 7
you will definitely start loving any programming language once you start thinking virtually in terms of programming, after that you will find it like a game.
10th Apr 2017, 7:52 AM
Tarique Khan
Tarique Khan - avatar
+ 4
Loving the language you're learning will definitely help. You can learn just as well if you don't like it, but chances are you won't play it with it as much if you hate using it. Wanting to experiment and explore new ideas is a major part of the learning process.
9th Apr 2017, 9:41 PM
Squidy
Squidy - avatar