Bro I’m in final year and literally know NOTHING, am I doomed? 😭
-
seriously. i struggled early, and have zero college. but mentor now the folks just out of college in our corp. I’m 46. They are nervous with new robotics degrees trying to tell me about ROS2 and I’m like … no, here’s how modbus works. Get at it. Tinker. Break stuff. Learn. it’s ok!
People like you are the best kind of mentors, imho
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
wrote last edited by [email protected]Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
Stop wasting your time would be my first advice.
If you really feel like you've wasted your time for the first 3 years, change. Change now. Not tomorrow, not next year, not after you manage to find the real 'good place that will help you learn something'. Do it now, where you are. Start learning, ask questions, discuss with teachers (and fellow students, too), invest yourself.
It's never too late, no matter how late. But there is no shortcut to doing the work.
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Like already mentioned, that's the place you're in right now. But, allow me to insist on that, it requires you to put in the work. Like with learning anything new.
The other suggestion I wanted to make was already given to you: since you seem to be into coding, start actually coding stuff. A diploma is not worth much compared to experience you acquire by making stuff and writing you own code for real.
There are plenty open source projects looking for someone to help push them forward if you have no idea on what to work. But if that's the case I would also suggest you question your motivation to study that.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
Graduated from college in 2005. I still feel that way.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
I graduated university a couple years ago and I felt in the same boat coming up to final exams. Like others have said, you almost certainly know more than you think. You're at the start of the final year as well so you have a lot of time to get ready.
Most IT/programming jobs will train you on the job and I haven't heard of anyone coming into a role who's expected to know everything, so I wouldn't worry about that too much. Getting the job will be the harder part, and the best thing I did was to consider my past experience and apply to jobs tightly related to that. I'll not dox myself so these will be fake details but that meant if I'd done a work experience position doing tech support for an accountancy firm, I'd have focused my applications on those companies. If you have a final year project to complete for a dissertation, see if you can tailor that to what you think are your best chances of a job. E.g. you did work experience doing IT support for a law firm, and your final year project has to be related to improving human rights, so you could develop a CRUD application to connect defendants to good pro bono lawyers. If there are law firms near you hiring for IT, that sort of thing that will help you stand out in an interview with them. I think I did only two interviews before getting a job offer with that tactic and I know others with the same degree who graduated the same day as me that still haven't found anything.
And outside of uni/college, is there anything in IT and computer science that interests you? I found that university killed my joy for it and I've only rediscovered it since graduating. Building a JavaScript web app for my final year project, led me to wanting to program some discord bots, from there onto using a raspberry pi to host them, and then into doing some self hosting and networking with the likes of Docker and WireGuard. Some of that has come in handy in work, especially when using linux servers, but it's stuff I do cause I just enjoy it and it so happens to give me some experience. There are tons of open-source projects you can work on to get experience with different parts of IT, and you're on a good website for it since most of us on here are Linux nerds.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
If you survived university this long, you must either be really good at cheating or you have imposter syndrome. My now Ex-wife graduated in a medical field 10 years ago, and the first year of her job she thought that she doesn't know enough. Then she realized how the others around her worked, and came to the conclusion that she had enough knowledge to use her critical thinking and to know where to look something up if she didn't know it. In the working world, noone has an issue with you looking something up you don't know by heart.
Also, i can only mirror what others here said - get on Github and find a project that interests you, or try modding a game you really like; It doesn't only mean you get practice, but also gives you the self assurance you are currently lacking.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
You'll learn more on the job than you did at uni, I sometimes have small projects that I hire out, you can reach out to me and try out a paid contract job with low pressure. I've helped a few other people through the same process but no promises.
The industry is moving very quickly, honestly don't stress too much about the nitty gritty details like syntax and such, probably a safe bet to focus on the practical side instead of the deeply technical side.
Every interview that I've given and taken has been more about personality and compatibility than skill.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
There’s always McDonalds.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
wrote last edited by [email protected]Find an open source project that's coded in your language of choice that you both care about (edit -- or that looks interesting to you, at least) and want to add functionality to.
Download a working copy, then, since you're learning with this, pretend the repo doesn't exist anymore and you're on your on with your self-imposed assignment.
Figure out what functionality you want to add, start with changing or augmenting something simple, and figure out where that would go in the existing code, and make it happen.
See if you can manage to Google search your way past any errors you run into, preferably alternating between ai answers and things like stack overflow posts, only instead of copy-pasting the code that errors out (or the solution code you get from ai or posts) actually step through things and figure out what the "solution" code is doing differently and ask yourself why and how that makes a difference or has a different effect from the code that generated the error in the first place. Then decide whether it's actually likely to fix the error or not. If you think it's going to? Try using it.
If it works, make sure you understand why.
If it doesn't, try to figure out why not.
Keep going until you have a working new feature.
Then try a more complicated feature.
After a few of those, try tackling some of the bugs in the repo.
-
Felt the same when I graduated from university. Three things:
- You know more than you think.
- The actual best thing you get from university is that it teaches you ways of thinking and structure your mind.
- No one expects you to be proficient when you start working. No worries, you will learn things by doing.
Keep third in mind. Do your best and don't get frustrated!
That's my favorite thing about switching jobs - low expectations!
However, I don't like how the training these days is usually "read through some old tickets, you'll figure it out, see you in a few days!"
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
wrote last edited by [email protected]Lots of advice here but I haven’t seen anyone mention coding boot camps. There are free ones like FreeCodeCamp or lots of paid options. You can do these to learn or validate what you have been taught.
My company hires associate-level software engineers directly out of college programs and boot camps. They don’t expect people from these to know everything; you may not have ever even used the language that you will be expected to code in! But by completing a program you’re showing you understand the logic of programming and that is applicable knowledge.
Look for entry-level jobs and you’ll be fine. Even better, look for companies that intentionally hire from programs like yours. They’re more likely to have internal programs to help teach new-to-career folks.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
wrote last edited by [email protected]"Gifted" but not quite genius kid here. I managed to coast through the first year of University, but then I hit a wall, where discipline and good study habits would have served me well.
Eeexcept I'd never needed to do that before and I had undiagnosed but pretty blatant and crippling ADHD which meant that I couldn't do that even if I tried. (I occasionally did try. No dice.)
Repeated the second year. Barely scraped through it. The decline continued. The final year I was just showing up because that's all I knew how to do and was too scared to up and quit.
Spent most of my time in the computer labs interacting on the early WWW. It was an excellent distraction from the absolute stress I was under.
Didn't graduate, but heard you could get a diploma for having passed the first two years. Requested and got that. No ceremony. No fanfare. It's in a picture frame in a pile of stuff somewhere around here. Too many painful memories to display it on a wall. I still have nightmares.
What I did do was go out and get a job. This was pre- turn-of-the-century so getting a job was way easier than it is now, but it still took six months. Ended up working for what is now a fairly big US-based company that shall remain nameless. (I was ousted long before they made it big.)
My advice would be to do similarly. If you don't think you can knuckle down and do what you need to in order to pass this course, get out now, or else at the end of the school year when there's a natural end to things.
BUT: Do at least try to knuckle down first. Lots of other good advice here. Maybe you're not in as bad a state as I was. Maybe you do in fact "got this". Getting and doing a job is different, but it's not necessarily easier. (But for me that's another story.)
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
Eh, I thought I was OK going into my career out of college only to find out I learned more 3 months on the job than I did in the classroom. About the only practical experience I got in college was in labs setting up environments. So don't sweat not knowing. You'll get direction in an entry level position, then you can work on your own stuff, or you can find a topic that interests you and work on it on the side like a video game or tool or website. My current side projects usually help me in my current career. So I picked up a skill that I never learned when I exited my first career (docker administration) and I feel like a goober for not learning in the past.
I know why i didn't learn it though. One, two, skip a few, after burnout and changing careers, my skills look like they could come back in fashion for moving stuff back to on premise and I could be useful again (IT) especially for small clusters, networking, and specialized local application support, so at least I have a backup plan for when AI takes over my current line of work.
I guess my point is the job is kinda like a better one stop shop that pays you to learn the specifics whose bosses should get you the guidance at least with incentivized goals; money.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
You're studying to be a programmer, right? You don't mention your comfort language, so I'm going to try to keep this language agnostic.
Here's what you do:
- Figure out the absolute simplest application you could possibly build. I'm going to suggest a to-do app, because it's traditional and it's a dead simple concept.
- Figure out the absolute simplest version of that application. I'm thinking it just renders a hard-coded list of to-dos with exactly one piece of interactivity, a button to cross off an entry.
- Add another piece of interactivity: Make the rendered text of a to-do entry editable.
- Add another piece of interactivity: Make the list resettable, so your edits and cross-offs vanish.
- Add another piece of interactivity: Make it possible to add entries to the list.
- Add another piece of interactivity: Make it possible to turn the list green.
- Add another piece of interactivity: Make it possible to remove entries from the list.
- Keep adding visible features until the frontend is the best goddamn to-do list you can make.
- Create a backend. Your backend has a database (such as MySQL). It has one table, which contains every to-do.
- Your backend should expose a REST API. If you don't know what that is, read up on it. They're very simple. Long story short, it's a means of sending and receiving structured JSON.
- Here's where your app gets real: The REST API can read from and write to the database. That means no more hard-coded entries on the frontend. Your frontend will now read from the REST API when it loads, and populate the to-do list from it. When you delete an entry, it will be removed from the database. When you cross one off or turn it green, it will change in the database.
- Congratulations, you've built a rudimentary real-world application!
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
I felt the same way you do when I was in my last year of college. I remember being really nervous about it and thinking that they didn’t give me any real world experience, but you’ll get that when you find a job. The job I got out of college was in a programming language that was so foreign to me (and probably most people) that I had no idea what I was doing, but you end up adapting and using the constructs they’ve taught you.
I’ve been working in tech for 24 years now and still feel like I don’t know enough for my job most days. The good thing is that it’s a constant learning experience I guess.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
Start it all over. Do things right the second time.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
Keep your mouth shut, and fake it til you make it.
It's what EVERYBODY does. That is literally the key to life that nobody tells you when you are young.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
wrote last edited by [email protected]Tech executive here. The likelihood of you being able to compete as a developer in the current job market when you cannot demonstrate skills, knowledge, or showcase your previous works is negligible. That said, you have access to the internet, FOSS, Git, presumably test environments at your school, teachers and fellow students to ask when you need help, etc.
Find a bunch of problems you'd like to solve or features you'd like to see and spend the next year cranking out projects. Make sure you have a portfolio fo projects that required multiple skillsets to achieve.
Also, there are a lot of free courses and even some certifications out there. AWS, Azure, and GCloud have all sorts of training available for free. Take some and use those skill to run some projects in cloud environments.
CONTAINERS!!!
EDIT:
The best position you can be is one where you don't want a job because you want to build your own thing. Be so good that companies want to compete to hire you away. -
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
Sounds like it's time to start some basic code camp / code academy / Udemy courses in your off time to catch up.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
Senior UI architect here. I didn't know shit about crap when I graduated college as far as programming, and I was on the fucking Dean's List and graduated with honors. 95% of what I know I learned it on the job after college. Today I work from home and have a comfortable income so don't let your fears take hold. You still have to study on your own creating personal projects which will teach you way more programming than what you learned in college.
-
Okay so… I just entered my final year and ngl I’m lowkey panicking.
I wasted my last 3 years doing basically nothing. I don’t know programming properly, never built a single real-world project, and now placements are around the corner.Like fr, is there still any chance for me to pick up a skill, actually build stuff, and somehow get job-ready before it’s too late? Or should I just accept my fate lol.
Also random question (pls don’t roast me): is there even a platform where you can:
- buy projects (so I can at least see how things work)
- get mentorship/teaching from people who know their stuff
- and later maybe even sell my own projects when I get better
Basically like a one-stop place to learn + build + get guidance. Does that even exist or am I just daydreaming here?
Any advice would be a lifesaver
---
wrote last edited by [email protected]The fact that you are questioning yourself means that you have the ability to introspect. I work at a major university and hire/manage people of all ages--as young as 15 and as old as 65. I have seen all kinds from the super smart and motivated to those who will sit in their position and do the minimum until they retire or those who are so incompetent or incapable of learning that they wash out of their own careers.
You probably compared yourself to that small number of people who did robotics club in high school, got into the elite CS/CE program, and already have a job offer from Meta for $150k. Don't do that, those people aren't normal and have never learned to just live. They also tend to experience constant and unending anxiety, which is why they drive themselves so hard. Do you really want to live that way?
I am always looking for that person who questions themself. If you are concerned about your ability to do something, you will put in the time to make sure that you do it well. If you have a Dunning-Kruger thing going on, then you're going to be a terrible employee and I will eventually resent you and find a way to get you out of my department.
My advice:
-
accept that you will suffer some form of imposter syndrome for life. This is fine--it is better to be a bit insecure than a bit overconfident. You will constantly work to make sure that what you output is the best quality it can be simply because you are worried that it isn't.
-
accept that you have little experience in your industry. You're not supposed to as a new graduate. The whole point of your training has been in learning how to think professionally and approach a problem academically. Once you have that basis, you can learn the details.
-
be kind to yourself. You're your own person and you don't need to use others as a metric. Avoid the "I'm supposed to have..." sort of thinking and just do the best you can.