If you are really into programming, there are 1000 times as much jobs in the "normal" software engineering. For me, the fun in programming is the same there. finding solutions and play around with whatever you've created
don't know the proper english names but what i did so far:
-school for 13 years (highest possible degree before university/allows you to go to the university)
- 3 years failed study of mechanical engineering
- 1 year aborted study buisness informatics
- and now i'm learning software engineering and I'm happy about. like really happy, love my job. took me one month to learn the important parts of java, after one year and a half I've already access to and I'm working with sensible data in a multi million € company
I'm currently in a "i can do and will do this for a very long time mood". should have picked it instantly after leaving school as i'm programming since I'm 10 years old... but i probably had to do some wrong decissions to find what i really like
If you are really into programming, there are 1000 times as much jobs in the "normal" software engineering. For me, the fun in programming is the same there. finding solutions and play around with whatever you've created
don't know the proper english names but what i did so far:
-school for 13 years (highest possible degree before university/allows you to go to the university)
- 3 years failed study of mechanical engineering
- 1 year aborted study buisness informatics
- and now i'm learning software engineering and I'm happy about. like really happy, love my job. took me one month to learn the important parts of java, after one year and a half I've already access to and I'm working with sensible data in a multi million € company
I'm currently in a "i can do and will do this for a very long time mood". should have picked it instantly after leaving school as i'm programming since I'm 10 years old... but i probably had to do some wrong decissions to find what i really like