• Dr. Wesker@lemmy.sdf.org
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    9 months ago

    Network. Lots of great opportunities can come from other devs, who you’ve developed a mutual respect with.

    Don’t neglect your personal projects.

    Learning architecture, and how to document it, is absolutely invaluable and can get you the big bucks.

    Don’t overengineer in an attempt to predict the future, and instead build deliberately and flexibly.

  • unmagical@lemmy.ml
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    9 months ago

    Finish projects: this will teach you how to set reasonable goals and expectations and how to break down large problems into smaller steps.

    Whenever you are facing something you don’t know how to do yet, recall a previous time you were faced with something you didn’t know how to do and that you learned how to accomplish it and moved forward: this helps me a lot with blockers and imposter syndrome–it shifts my mentality from being lost and not knowing how to keep going to one of “I’m capable of learning, that’s gotten me this far, and will continue to advance me.”

  • CookieOfFortune@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Learn to work in a team. Most careers will have you working on a team and it’s important for you and the people around you to work effectively together.

    First and foremost don’t be an asshole. I hate that this has to be said. This doesn’t mean you have to be friends with everyone but honestly liking the people you work with all the time does make the job more pleasant.