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If you're looking to improve yourself you're looking at this completely the wrong way. Like vascowhitevascowhite I'm mainly self-taught in the primary language I know and completely self-taught in the other languages I use. I've also had no training and I don't have a computer science degree. What you're missing, and what I think vascowhite's answer's missing is that nothing has taught me more than Stack Overflow and due to that there's no need to settle for mediocrity.

Your question is how does a mediocre programmer build expertise. My answer is slightly different... you're only a mediocre programmer because you choose to pigeon-hole yourself that way. Rather than determining to be average and gain reputation concentrate on how you can learn to be better than average and the reputation will come naturally. In order to get reputation you need 2 things:

  1. The ability to write posts that succinctly explain or solve a problem including both code and an English explanation. In other words, you need to be able to explain technical concepts well.
  2. Knowledge of the subject you're posting on.

Neither of these are things you can magically conjure out of the air, but if I have one bit of advice for someone who honestly wants to learn something here it's: answer everything. I do not mean click "Post Your Answer". I mean attempt to answer everything within a problem domain that you have some experience.

As you post check everyone else's answer and assess it against your understanding of the question. If you're completely wrong then it doesn't matter and you don't need to post. If you're correct, or if everyone else is completely wrong (it happens!) then post. You may get some reputation, you may not. It doesn't matter. What you have done in this situation is attempt to solve the answer for yourself and (hopefully) dispassionately assessed your own abilities against other people. Pay attention to what they write. Your own desire to learn and attempt to solve a problem and the community's knowledge are a potent combination when combined.

Other's have stated here that you're not going to get reputation or benefit from answering questions until you have some expertise in some language. You probably won't get much reputation but you will benefit by attempting the problems and viewing, testing, and remembering other's solutions to those same problems.

Good luck!

If you're looking to improve yourself you're looking at this completely the wrong way. Like vascowhite I'm mainly self-taught in the primary language I know and completely self-taught in the other languages I use. I've also had no training and I don't have a computer science degree. What you're missing, and what I think vascowhite's answer's missing is that nothing has taught me more than Stack Overflow and due to that there's no need to settle for mediocrity.

Your question is how does a mediocre programmer build expertise. My answer is slightly different... you're only a mediocre programmer because you choose to pigeon-hole yourself that way. Rather than determining to be average and gain reputation concentrate on how you can learn to be better than average and the reputation will come naturally. In order to get reputation you need 2 things:

  1. The ability to write posts that succinctly explain or solve a problem including both code and an English explanation. In other words, you need to be able to explain technical concepts well.
  2. Knowledge of the subject you're posting on.

Neither of these are things you can magically conjure out of the air, but if I have one bit of advice for someone who honestly wants to learn something here it's: answer everything. I do not mean click "Post Your Answer". I mean attempt to answer everything within a problem domain that you have some experience.

As you post check everyone else's answer and assess it against your understanding of the question. If you're completely wrong then it doesn't matter and you don't need to post. If you're correct, or if everyone else is completely wrong (it happens!) then post. You may get some reputation, you may not. It doesn't matter. What you have done in this situation is attempt to solve the answer for yourself and (hopefully) dispassionately assessed your own abilities against other people. Pay attention to what they write. Your own desire to learn and attempt to solve a problem and the community's knowledge are a potent combination when combined.

Other's have stated here that you're not going to get reputation or benefit from answering questions until you have some expertise in some language. You probably won't get much reputation but you will benefit by attempting the problems and viewing, testing, and remembering other's solutions to those same problems.

Good luck!

If you're looking to improve yourself you're looking at this completely the wrong way. Like vascowhite I'm mainly self-taught in the primary language I know and completely self-taught in the other languages I use. I've also had no training and I don't have a computer science degree. What you're missing, and what I think vascowhite's answer's missing is that nothing has taught me more than Stack Overflow and due to that there's no need to settle for mediocrity.

Your question is how does a mediocre programmer build expertise. My answer is slightly different... you're only a mediocre programmer because you choose to pigeon-hole yourself that way. Rather than determining to be average and gain reputation concentrate on how you can learn to be better than average and the reputation will come naturally. In order to get reputation you need 2 things:

  1. The ability to write posts that succinctly explain or solve a problem including both code and an English explanation. In other words, you need to be able to explain technical concepts well.
  2. Knowledge of the subject you're posting on.

Neither of these are things you can magically conjure out of the air, but if I have one bit of advice for someone who honestly wants to learn something here it's: answer everything. I do not mean click "Post Your Answer". I mean attempt to answer everything within a problem domain that you have some experience.

As you post check everyone else's answer and assess it against your understanding of the question. If you're completely wrong then it doesn't matter and you don't need to post. If you're correct, or if everyone else is completely wrong (it happens!) then post. You may get some reputation, you may not. It doesn't matter. What you have done in this situation is attempt to solve the answer for yourself and (hopefully) dispassionately assessed your own abilities against other people. Pay attention to what they write. Your own desire to learn and attempt to solve a problem and the community's knowledge are a potent combination when combined.

Other's have stated here that you're not going to get reputation or benefit from answering questions until you have some expertise in some language. You probably won't get much reputation but you will benefit by attempting the problems and viewing, testing, and remembering other's solutions to those same problems.

Good luck!

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Ben
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If you're looking to improve yourself you're looking at this completely the wrong way. Like vascowhite I'm mainly self-taught in the primary language I know and completely self-taught in the other languages I use. I've also had no training and I don't have a computer science degree. What you're missing, and what I think vascowhite's answer's missing is that nothing has taught me more than Stack Overflow and due to that there's no need to settle for mediocrity.

Your question is how does a mediocre programmer build expertise. My answer is slightly different... you're only a mediocre programmer because you choose to pigeon-hole yourself that way. Rather than determining to be average and gain reputation concentrate on how you can learn to be better than average and the reputation will come naturally. In order to get reputation you need 2 things:

  1. The ability to write posts that succinctly explain or solve a problem including both code and an English explanation. In other words, you need to be able to explain technical concepts well.
  2. Knowledge of the subject you're posting on.

Neither of these are things you can magically conjure out of the air, but if I have one bit of advice for someone who honestly wants to learn something here it's: answer everything. I do not mean click "Post Your Answer". I mean attempt to answer everything within a problem domain that you have some experience.

As you post check everyone else's answer and assess it against your understanding of the question. If you're completely wrong then it doesn't matter and you don't need to post. If you're correct, or if everyone else is completely wrong (it happens!) then post. You may get some reputation, you may not. It doesn't matter. What you have done in this situation is attempt to solve the answer for yourself and (hopefully) dispassionately assessed your own abilities against other people. Pay attention to what they write. Your own desire to learn and attempt to solve a problem and the community's knowledge are a potent combination when combined.

Other's have stated here that you're not going to get reputation or benefit from answering questions until you have some expertise in some language. You probably won't get much reputation but you will benefit by attempting the problems and viewing, testing, and remembering other's solutions to those same problems.

Good luck!