From: Craig Maloney Date: Thu, 17 May 2018 11:48:10 +0000 (-0400) Subject: Checkpoint X-Git-Tag: 0.2.0^2~11 X-Git-Url: https://jxself.org/git/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=8c5bbb4adad7fd6ffac5edf168daab2113af518a;p=themediocreprogrammer.git Checkpoint --- diff --git a/frontmatter.txt b/frontmatter.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0f27a4a --- /dev/null +++ b/frontmatter.txt @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +The Mediocre Programmer + +Copyright (c) 2018 by Craig Maloney + +Released under a Creative Commons CC-BY-SA International 4.0 license. diff --git a/intro.md b/intro.md index 9ae30c6..58465a7 100644 --- a/intro.md +++ b/intro.md @@ -18,10 +18,12 @@ They see others being wildly successful and wonder if they were absent the day t The truth is we're all mediocre developers in some way. We all still ask questions and have to look up syntax and concepts in our day-to-day programming. Computers continue to add complexity to everyday programming tasks and it takes a lot of mental bandwidth to keep all of those concepts fresh in our mind. +## Why this book? + This book is about helping you along on the journey of being a mediocre developer. Together we'll uncover some of common misconceptions we have about programming, failure, and growth and come to understand that the act of programming and development is something we undertake each day and improve in small ways. It's these small changes that over time transform us from being mediocre developers into better developers. There are plenty of books on how to become a better developer out there. Usually they have checklists and other things that the author deems important for you to do in order to become a better developer. This book will try not to saddle you with more work (you likely have enough as it is). Rather, we'll discuss what it feels like to be a programmer. We'll talk about the emotion of being a programmer; the feelings of frustration, guilt, anger, and inadequacy. We'll talk about those feelings you have of giving up and walking away from computing and whether those feelings come from a place of love or a worry that you're not keeping up. -This book is a personal journey for both of us. It's a memoir of my time as a programmer and my feelings along the way. I've thought many times about giving up and finding a different career path but funnily enough doing anything other than being a computer programmer scares me even more. Does that mean I'm stuck in a perverse oroborous of self-pity and self-doubt? Hardly. It means that I need to dig deeper to understand why I chose the path of being a programmer and realize that it took a lot to get here and it's going to take a lot more to get where I want to be. It's a commitment to seeing things as they are now and moving forward from wherever I'm standing. +This book is a personal journey for both of us. It's a memoir of my time as a programmer and my feelings along the way. I've thought many times about giving up and finding a different career path but doing anything other than being a computer programmer scares me even more. Does that mean I'm stuck in a perverse ouroboros of self-pity and self-doubt? Hardly. It means that I need to dig deeper to understand why I chose the path of being a programmer and realize that it took a lot to get here and it's going to take a lot more to get where I want to be. It's a commitment to seeing things as they are now and moving forward from wherever I'm standing. Let's start the journey with figuring out what lead us here and where we are now.