03-04-2017, 11:09 AM
+1 to seibaby
Yeah, if you already have knowledge of a higher level programming language, it's easier to transition to the lower level stuff. But if you haven't done any programming before, I'm sure it's faster to just dive right in. There's also a large amount of code to work with here.
I'm a software engineering student, and the co-op that I'm doing right now is the first time I'm programming for a large company. We're working with a bunch of technologies that I have no experience with, and the codebase is a lot larger than what I've worked with in the past. So it's taking quite a while to get up to speed on everything. I feel like the only difference is that I have the confidence that I will understand it eventually. Don't focus on what everybody else is doing, just focus on what you need to do to figure things out.
Yeah, if you already have knowledge of a higher level programming language, it's easier to transition to the lower level stuff. But if you haven't done any programming before, I'm sure it's faster to just dive right in. There's also a large amount of code to work with here.
I'm a software engineering student, and the co-op that I'm doing right now is the first time I'm programming for a large company. We're working with a bunch of technologies that I have no experience with, and the codebase is a lot larger than what I've worked with in the past. So it's taking quite a while to get up to speed on everything. I feel like the only difference is that I have the confidence that I will understand it eventually. Don't focus on what everybody else is doing, just focus on what you need to do to figure things out.
