Hello there, welcome to The Coderpreneur.
The main purpose behind creating this channel is to write and discuss topics that interest us, as we call ourselves "The Coderpreneurs", because X limits the times and the amount you post, so it'd be better if I write here instead of Twitter.
Our plans with this community are to make it even bigger, where we come together, share our learnings, make new friends every day (The Coderpreneurs group chat), and talk about exciting topics.
PS: This community is not only restricted to coding/tech, we also talk about online businesses, content creation, building in public, self-improvement, and much more.
- React to this post with a thumbs-up
- Join the group chat to talk to other people as well (link below)
- make new connections
- Suggest topics to write about
- If you can, share it with others so they could benefit as well.
Long-form posts and many more exciting events coming soon, let's make it big in 2024 :)
Appreciate all the support from your side, keep hustling, keep showing up every day, and you'll thank yourself by the end of the year.
Group chat link:
https://t.me/thecoderpreneurs
The main purpose behind creating this channel is to write and discuss topics that interest us, as we call ourselves "The Coderpreneurs", because X limits the times and the amount you post, so it'd be better if I write here instead of Twitter.
Our plans with this community are to make it even bigger, where we come together, share our learnings, make new friends every day (The Coderpreneurs group chat), and talk about exciting topics.
PS: This community is not only restricted to coding/tech, we also talk about online businesses, content creation, building in public, self-improvement, and much more.
- React to this post with a thumbs-up
- Join the group chat to talk to other people as well (link below)
- make new connections
- Suggest topics to write about
- If you can, share it with others so they could benefit as well.
Long-form posts and many more exciting events coming soon, let's make it big in 2024 :)
Appreciate all the support from your side, keep hustling, keep showing up every day, and you'll thank yourself by the end of the year.
Group chat link:
https://t.me/thecoderpreneurs
The Coderpreneur pinned «Hello there, welcome to The Coderpreneur. The main purpose behind creating this channel is to write and discuss topics that interest us, as we call ourselves "The Coderpreneurs", because X limits the times and the amount you post, so it'd be better if I write…»
The most important question to ask yourself before working on anything is:
"WHY"
You need to have a strong sense of purpose and a strong reason behind attempting to succeed in any aspect of life.
Why do I code daily? Because I want to become a good software engineer.
Why do I write daily? Because I want to impact lives and make them better.
Why do I workout every day? Because I want to have the best physique when I enter a room.
You will only go so far with the goals others have fed you over these years, what do you want to do?
Have you asked yourself this question?
If not, WHY?
"WHY"
You need to have a strong sense of purpose and a strong reason behind attempting to succeed in any aspect of life.
Why do I code daily? Because I want to become a good software engineer.
Why do I write daily? Because I want to impact lives and make them better.
Why do I workout every day? Because I want to have the best physique when I enter a room.
You will only go so far with the goals others have fed you over these years, what do you want to do?
Have you asked yourself this question?
If not, WHY?
Most of you are learning to code the wrong way.
90% of beginners stick to tutorials for months and live in a dilemma that they are making progress just because the topics are getting advanced day by day.
WRONG.
Do this exercise:
- Select the last 5 concepts you learned from tutorials
- pick up a mini project that uses those concepts
- Now try to build the project without using the help of any resource
Can you do it in one go?
Sure, some googling here and there is alright, but without using any help?
You CAN'T.
Still think tutorials work in your favor?
Instead, follow this 3 step framework:
1. Choose a topic to learn
2. Read the documentation
3. Implement it ASAP
Also, try to read the use cases of it.
This might seem slower, but it's better than speedrunning 100 topics and not knowing how to use them in real-time.
All the best coding.
90% of beginners stick to tutorials for months and live in a dilemma that they are making progress just because the topics are getting advanced day by day.
WRONG.
Do this exercise:
- Select the last 5 concepts you learned from tutorials
- pick up a mini project that uses those concepts
- Now try to build the project without using the help of any resource
Can you do it in one go?
Sure, some googling here and there is alright, but without using any help?
You CAN'T.
Still think tutorials work in your favor?
Instead, follow this 3 step framework:
1. Choose a topic to learn
2. Read the documentation
3. Implement it ASAP
Also, try to read the use cases of it.
This might seem slower, but it's better than speedrunning 100 topics and not knowing how to use them in real-time.
All the best coding.
You aren't mindful of your actions.
Most of you waste time scrolling YouTube shorts, or Instagram reels as soon as you wake up.
The first hour of your day defines EVERYTHING.
- Freshen up
- Get some sunlight
- Drink 500ml of water
- Meditate
- read a book
Win the morning, and you'll win the day.
And when you win the day, you sleep peacefully knowing you gave it your all.
This is the way of winning every day, only the disciplined ones are going ahead.
Most of you waste time scrolling YouTube shorts, or Instagram reels as soon as you wake up.
The first hour of your day defines EVERYTHING.
- Freshen up
- Get some sunlight
- Drink 500ml of water
- Meditate
- read a book
Win the morning, and you'll win the day.
And when you win the day, you sleep peacefully knowing you gave it your all.
This is the way of winning every day, only the disciplined ones are going ahead.
Coding gets repetitive too soon.
If you stick to the same tech stack, keep building projects that use the same concepts, or even keep executing the same plan over and over again.
- you might burn out
- you might lose motivation
- you might even give up
So what's the solution?
1. Keep learning newer things: This is inevitable, no developer on this planet knows everything. You need to keep learning something new for you to stay on track with your journey.
2. Share your learnings: Write content online, share what you're building, make connections, and join communities. This way, there's always something to look forward to.
All the best.
If you stick to the same tech stack, keep building projects that use the same concepts, or even keep executing the same plan over and over again.
- you might burn out
- you might lose motivation
- you might even give up
So what's the solution?
1. Keep learning newer things: This is inevitable, no developer on this planet knows everything. You need to keep learning something new for you to stay on track with your journey.
2. Share your learnings: Write content online, share what you're building, make connections, and join communities. This way, there's always something to look forward to.
All the best.
🥁
As you might already know, I promised something 2 weeks ago, I will launch something that will solve the biggest problem you face as a developer:
The Tutorial Hell.
Is this you:
- Not being able to code logic by yourself
- Find it tough to understand new concepts
- A hassle to build new projects from SCRATCH
- Cannot write code without external help.
If yes, being a special member :) of The Coderpreneur community, you get the access to the journal first, and then everyone else.
What's the wait for?
Get it asap, the best part? ITS FREE!
🔗 https://atharvahinge.gumroad.com/l/tutorial-hell-buster?layout=profile
As you might already know, I promised something 2 weeks ago, I will launch something that will solve the biggest problem you face as a developer:
The Tutorial Hell.
Is this you:
- Not being able to code logic by yourself
- Find it tough to understand new concepts
- A hassle to build new projects from SCRATCH
- Cannot write code without external help.
If yes, being a special member :) of The Coderpreneur community, you get the access to the journal first, and then everyone else.
What's the wait for?
Get it asap, the best part? ITS FREE!
🔗 https://atharvahinge.gumroad.com/l/tutorial-hell-buster?layout=profile
Gumroad
The Tutorial Hell Buster
Build real-world projects and strengthen your resume.A year ago, I enrolled in a boot camp for 3 months, but when I started building my own projects, I couldn't even write 1 line of code by myself....
The only difference between you, and the person you aspire to become is the amount of action they're willing to take.
Got a new content idea? Post it.
Got a new product idea? Start building it.
Got a new strategy in mind? Execute it.
The shorter the time gap between idea & execution, the shorter you have to wait for results.
Don't look too deep into the future, what's meant to be, will happen eventually, you do what's best for you at the moment, keep working, results will be yours.
Got a new content idea? Post it.
Got a new product idea? Start building it.
Got a new strategy in mind? Execute it.
The shorter the time gap between idea & execution, the shorter you have to wait for results.
Don't look too deep into the future, what's meant to be, will happen eventually, you do what's best for you at the moment, keep working, results will be yours.
If you are a beginner developer:
Start the 100DaysOfCode challenge ASAP.
- Not to learn any tech stack in specific, or a new programming language in general
- Not to make connections on social media who will ditch you when time comes
- Not to build in public and showcase your skills to the world.
All of these are just additional benefits which come with doing the challenge, but they are not the main motive behind it.
The main purpose is to learn how to stay consistent with coding.
Coding on a daily basis, solving problems and building stuff is the highest ROI task you can do.
Nothing is more rewarding than staying consistent, especially in the long run.
Start the 100DaysOfCode challenge ASAP.
- Not to learn any tech stack in specific, or a new programming language in general
- Not to make connections on social media who will ditch you when time comes
- Not to build in public and showcase your skills to the world.
All of these are just additional benefits which come with doing the challenge, but they are not the main motive behind it.
The main purpose is to learn how to stay consistent with coding.
Coding on a daily basis, solving problems and building stuff is the highest ROI task you can do.
Nothing is more rewarding than staying consistent, especially in the long run.
The only thing I regret from yesterday is not giving my 100%.
Nothing else will leave you with more stress than not fulfilling your potential, keep going.
Nothing else will leave you with more stress than not fulfilling your potential, keep going.
Forwarded from Atharva
No idea why the heck is Twitter restricting my account from the past few days.