10 Ways to Learn New Things in Development

本文分享了十个实用的方法帮助开发者提升编程技能,包括阅读书籍、阅读代码、编写代码、与其他开发者交流等,旨在鼓励持续学习和个人成长。

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10 Ways to Learn New Things in Development
Posted on April 1st, 2008 by Ben
Expanding upon one of the topics in my post about 5 Attributes of Highly Effective Developers, I’ve been thinking of various ways to kick-start learning opportunities in my career and hobbies.

1. [color=red]Read books[/color]. There are tons of books about programming–probably most of them are useless, but there are many, many gems that can greatly influence your abilities.

I still find that it’s easier and faster to find information about many topics in familiar books than to find similarly valuable information online. Read all your books to get to this point.


Books are also valuable from theory, architecture, design point of view. There just aren’t that many places on the web to get high-quality, authoritative instruction in this.

2. [color=red]Read Code.[/color] This is something I was late to. I didn’t start reading a lot of significant code until after I had a few years of professional programming experience. I would be a better programmer if I had started earlier. I try to read some source code every week (not related to work, not my own, etc.) from an open source project. Start with programs that you use and are interested in. I started with Paint.Net and it solidified a lot of .Net program design technique for me.

Reading other people’s code shows you different ways of doing things than you might have thought of on your own.

3. [color=red]Write Code[/color] - Lots of it. Fundamentally, the best way to learn something is to do it. You can’t fully internalize something until you’ve written it. This starts with something as simple as copying the code examples from tutorials and books. That’s copying by hand, not cut&paste. There’s a difference. The idea is internalize and think, not blindly copy. Look up new API calls as you go. Tweak things.

Most importantly, develop your own projects–whether they’re simple games, participation in an open source project, or a simple plug-in to a program you use.

Try to use new technologies, new techniques, new designs–do things differently. Do things better in this project than in previous ones.

This is really the core point–if you want to be a better developer than develop.

4. [color=red]Talk to other developers[/color] - about specific problems you have, as well as the latest tech news from [Apple|Microsoft|Google|Other]. This not only helps you feel part of a team or a community, but exposes you to a wide variety of different ideas.

Different types of projects require different designs, coding techniques, processes and thinking.

If you work in a small team (like I do) and you don’t have access to many other people, go find some at a local user group meeting. If nothing else, participate in online forums (you’ll have to look harder for an intelligent discussion).

5. [color=red]Teach others[/color]. Similar to just reading code versus writing it, teaching other people can do wonders for forcing you to learn a topic in depth.

The very idea that you’re going to have to teach a topic to someone else should force you to learn something with a far better understanding than you might otherwise. You can face questions.

If you can’t explain a concept to a 6 year-old, you don’t fully understand it. - Albert Einstein

Teaching situations are myriad: one-on-one with your office-mate, water-cooler meetings, informal weekly gatherings, learning lunches, classrooms, seminars, and more.

How about setting up a once-a-week 30 minute informal discussion among like-minded developers? Each week, someone picks a topic they want to know more about and teaches it to the others, instigating a conversation. If you knew were going to teach the group about synchronization objects, don’t you think you’d want to understand the ins and outs of critical section implementation?

6. [color=red]Listen to podcasts [/color]
If you’ve got time where your brain isn’t otherwise occupied, subscribe to podcasts. My current favorite programming-related one is .Net Rocks. They also do a video screen cast called dnrTV.

These will help you keep up on the latest and greatest technologies. You can’t learn everything and podcasts are a good way to get shallow, broad knowledge about a variety of topics, from which you can do your own deep investigations.

If there are other, high-quality developer podcasts, I’d love to hear about them.

7. [color=red]Read blogs[/color]

There are more blogs than people to read them, but some are extremely well-done. I’m not even going to post links to any–there are plenty of other resources out there for that. This is one of the best ways to connect to people who actually develop the software you love and use.

8. [color=red]Learn a new language[/color]

If all you’ve ever done is C(++,#)/Java there are a LOT of other ways to think about computer problems. Learning a new language will change the way you think. It’s not just a different syntax–it’s fundamentally rewiring the brain. Sure, all languages get compiled down to assembler in the end, but that doesn’t mean a high level abstraction isn’t valuable.

Functional, query, and aspect-oriented languages are starting to merge with C-based languages–are you ready?

9. [color=red]Learn the anti-patterns[/color]

Aside from knowing what to do, learn what not to do. Read Dailywtf.com often and take the lessons to heart if you don’t already know.

It’s all well and good to understand proper OO design, coding style, and what you should be writing, but it’s easy to get into bad habits if you’re not careful. Learning to recognize bad ideas is vital when taking charge of a project.

Wikipedia has a thorough breakdown of many common anti-patterns,

10. [color=red]Be Humble[/color]

Learning means:

Replacing faulty knowledge with better knowledge
Adding knowledge that you do not already have
There’s no way to learn until you admit you have some deficiencies. It all comes back to humility, doesn’t it? If you ever start thinking you know everything you need to, you’re in trouble. True learning is about hungrily seeking after knowledge and internalizing it. It takes lots effort. We all know this in theory, but we have to be constantly reminded.
内容概要:该论文探讨了一种基于粒子群优化(PSO)的STAR-RIS辅助NOMA无线通信网络优化方法。STAR-RIS作为一种新型可重构智能表面,能同时反射和传输信号,与传统仅能反射的RIS不同。结合NOMA技术,STAR-RIS可以提升覆盖范围、用户容量和频谱效率。针对STAR-RIS元素众多导致获取完整信道状态信息(CSI)开销大的问题,作者提出一种在不依赖完整CSI的情况下,联合优化功率分配、基站波束成形以及STAR-RIS的传输和反射波束成形向量的方法,以最大化总可实现速率并确保每个用户的最低速率要求。仿真结果显示,该方案优于STAR-RIS辅助的OMA系统。 适合人群:具备一定无线通信理论基础、对智能反射面技术和非正交多址接入技术感兴趣的科研人员和工程师。 使用场景及目标:①适用于希望深入了解STAR-RIS与NOMA结合的研究者;②为解决无线通信中频谱资源紧张、提高系统性能提供新的思路和技术手段;③帮助理解PSO算法在无线通信优化问题中的应用。 其他说明:文中提供了详细的Python代码实现,涵盖系统参数设置、信道建模、速率计算、目标函数定义、约束条件设定、主优化函数设计及结果可视化等环节,便于读者理解和复现实验结果。此外,文章还对比了PSO与其他优化算法(如DDPG)的区别,强调了PSO在不需要显式CSI估计方面的优势。
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