This is a thread for people who want to learn programming, whether they are non-programmers, beginners, or advanced programmers who want to learn more. If you would like to discuss programming with other people from the LW community, this is the right place.
While programming is not a central topic of this website, it is related to many ideas discussed here. About a third of LW users described their profession as "Computers" in the recent survey. Some users have expressed desire to learn programming. Some users have recommended learning programming to others. There are many other websites (or books, etc.) for learning programming, but talking with the people you already know, following our traditions of rational discourse, could be an advantage.
So this is the experiment. Unlike Open Thread, it has a specific topic, and the beginners are encouraged to ask their programming questions, even if they are completely unrelated to the usual LW topics. Especially the open-ended questions like "how...?" and "why...?". (Maybe we are already strong enough to survive even the mindkilling questions like "which programming language is the best?".)
Here are some older LW articles about programming:
- Why learning programming is a great idea even if you'd never want to code for a living
- I want to learn programming
- Are Functional languages the future of programming?
- Colonization models: a programming tutorial;a tutorial on computational Bayesian inference
- Khan Academy: Introduction to programming and computer science
- Free Tutoring in Math/Programming
- More intuitive programming languages
- Learn to code
- What is the best programming language?
- Computer Science and Programming: Links and Resources
- Advice On Getting A Software Job
- Checking for the Programming Gear
Here are some other resources:
- Computer Science @ Khan Academy
- Project Euler - problems to test your programming skills
- Stack Overflow - for specific questions
...and there are also many links within the articles.
And here is the place for your questions:
If we juxtapose Yossi Kreinin's rant about nomads vs settlers in programming, Steve Yegge's rant about liberals vs conservatives in programming, and Robin Hanson's idea that liberals are foragers while conservatives are farmers, do we get anything insightful?
I associate Yosefk's nomad programmers with maximizing the amount of program you can hold in your head, since you don't find working very closely with other people very productive. This gets you weird super-expressive languages like Lisp and Haskell in favor of things like Java or C++, which have the forced common idiom and interface conventions to help collaboration between multiple developers. This gets you different types of culture, with the nomad programmers making small works that can get arbitrarily tricky and impressive, while the settler programme... (read more)