

You suck at everything, nothing makes sense and your way of thinking hasn't adjusted to what it has to be for you to be able to absorb and learn new stuff quickly yet. I like to think of this stage of learning any complex skill as the barrier to entry portion. I had the same experience at the start where I couldn't conceptualize how a problem could be solved much less write anything to actualize it. I try my best to solve the challenges but it takes me HOURS and most of the time I can't solve them. Just be weary of the claims of how hireable you'll be afterward.
#Funny thonny python 69 code code
The part that's fun is making stuff yourself that actually takes effort, not just opening a code editor and filling in a few missing lines so the project structure is great in that sense. I much preferred it to Python for everybody which I used on my previous attempt to learn a few years ago. If you think of this as a course to learn the basic fundamentals of Python it's great. But I highly doubt I'd be able to finish any of them in just 1 day and definitely not in the 2 hours she says each day should last in the intro video

The last 15 days are non-guided projects, this is fine since there is definitely enough content to justify the price without them." Master the Python programming language by building 100 projects over 100 days" - think it's obvious you can't master it in 100 days."Create a portfolio of 100 Python projects to apply for developer jobs" - I won't claim to be an expert in good practice for developer portfolios but it seems like a terrible idea to put all your beginner shitter projects on there.

