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What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode Prototypr

What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode By Eleftheria Batsou
What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode By Eleftheria Batsou

What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode By Eleftheria Batsou Each day, i coded for 1–3 hours depending on my availability, but i never skipped. i kept it realistic and progress based, not perfection based. here are a few highlights: 1. consistency beats motivation. there were days i felt uninspired. but i showed up anyway. that’s where real growth came from. 2. small wins matter. This talk is about “scaling yourself” and what i learned after the #100daysofcode challenge. i will present some helpful tips about self motivation, time management, stop procrastination,.

What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode Prototypr
What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode Prototypr

What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode Prototypr After about one week of studying react, i started to code along with a few react tutorials and made a few projects applying what i learnt to them. I'm going to present my personal examples of coding studying every single day for the past 1,5 years, what i gained and how i achieved my goals. we are going to explore ways of finding mentors, friends and expanding your social network. I gain followers on twitter, codepen, and even in github. i learned to be more optimistic, grateful, and be better at time managment. i learned to set priorities and actually stick to them. i got feedback on my projects and positive vibes for my fellow coders. Published on | prototyping: from ux to front end — medium eleftheria batsou i am a slow walker, but i never walk back — abraham lincoln how it started i read an article from the creator of the #100daysofcode challenge, alexander kallaway, and it got me super interested.

What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode Prototypr
What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode Prototypr

What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode Prototypr I gain followers on twitter, codepen, and even in github. i learned to be more optimistic, grateful, and be better at time managment. i learned to set priorities and actually stick to them. i got feedback on my projects and positive vibes for my fellow coders. Published on | prototyping: from ux to front end — medium eleftheria batsou i am a slow walker, but i never walk back — abraham lincoln how it started i read an article from the creator of the #100daysofcode challenge, alexander kallaway, and it got me super interested. I'm currently taking a course called "100 days of code: the complete python pro bootcamp for 2023." this is my first foray into programming. i've been enjoying it and have learned an incredible amount so far. i'm starting to consider the next step in my journey. i want to move more into the machine learning field. I can now build complex modern web applications single handedly across the full javascript stack. i plan to continue expanding into unfamiliar coding territory even after completing #100daysofcode. that initial thrill of unknown discovery keeps me feeling fresh and engaged as a teacher. Over these last few months, however, i’ve completely thrown myself into learning to code, web development best practices, and computer science theory (in a limited fashion). here are some tips i’ve picked up along the way.

What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode Prototypr
What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode Prototypr

What I Gained After 1 Year Of 100daysofcode Prototypr I'm currently taking a course called "100 days of code: the complete python pro bootcamp for 2023." this is my first foray into programming. i've been enjoying it and have learned an incredible amount so far. i'm starting to consider the next step in my journey. i want to move more into the machine learning field. I can now build complex modern web applications single handedly across the full javascript stack. i plan to continue expanding into unfamiliar coding territory even after completing #100daysofcode. that initial thrill of unknown discovery keeps me feeling fresh and engaged as a teacher. Over these last few months, however, i’ve completely thrown myself into learning to code, web development best practices, and computer science theory (in a limited fashion). here are some tips i’ve picked up along the way.

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