If you can adequately explain the issue you're having, maybe they won't. At least that's been my experience
Back in the day when I was terrible at asking questions, they would tell me to drop it in a codepen but now I just take a deep breath, write out a detailed question that outlines my detailed issue and copy and paste the specific parts of code that are causing my issue, and no one asks for a codepen anymore
It's all in the way you ask the question.![]()



Dang, what are some coding discords for asking stackoverflow like questions?
The youtube channel is dope too https://www.youtube.com/c/NeetCode/videos
Yeah there are but, but the job description from hr will probably contain a bunch of fluff like:SQL jobs? i didn't think there are specific jobs for SQLI'm using Sequelize at the moment, first time using a ORM. Different from Raw SQL.
Ah I meant any question that has a good amount of detail such as:How do you define a stackoverflow question? I asked a React question in a React server yesterday cause I couldn't find the solution in SO. I just look for servers that deal with whatever I work with. I have Linux servers, React servers, security servers etc etc.
Ah I meant any question that has a good amount of detail such as:
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Re-rendering Table component when parent passes new or updated data
I am transitioning from React Table 6 to 7, which comes with a lot of new changes as React Table 7 is now a headless utility library, built with lots and lots of hooks. This is much different from ...stackoverflow.com
But yeah, makes send to check language-specific servers. I'm a member of a few myself, but was wondering if I was out the loop of another one everyone knew about as a stackoverflow alternate.

I've been coding since I was a little breh and this is what keeps me in it.Getting stuck on the problems is the best part. That feeling when I solve a frustrating problem is one of the top 3 feelings I've ever felt in my life
That's what programming is at its core. It's simply coming up with a solution to a problem. You have to rewire the way you think to be a good dev.
You also have to be committed though and like @Cereal_Bowl_Assassin said, you have to be willing to play the game and lose multiple times. But each time you lose, it gets you closer and closer to the winning solution.
Ok cool, what the fukk I been missing?I see stuff more complex than that on Discord every day![]()

I've been coding since I was a little breh and this is what keeps me in it.
People in my circle ask me to help them learn to code, but they can't get over this basic step. The run into the first signs of resistance and they quit instead of rolling up their sleeves. They expect it to just flow like a hacker in a movie in Hollywood and thats just not how it works.
A good problem will haunt you in the best possible way. Sometimes its all I can think about. That moment when it finally clicks is just something else. The worst is when you're not near a computer and you have a eureka moment and all you want to do is get back to a terminal.
Graphics development, particularly when writing shaders, is full of those moments. And you get the visual gratification. I find web development a bit more boring in this regard. It's pretty straightforward except for the infrastructure and boilerplate (and CSS which is just annoying).
I was thinking that we needed to start a new megathread and get the programming interview game going for thecoli. Being stuck on the 6 certs game is played out. These cacs and asians are killing the interview prep game right now and getting all the FAANG money. There's too few of us brehs on this tip. I've been the only breh in my whole damn department/company for the last 13 years now.