@namanhkapur

i still can’t center a div in css #iykyk

@BasharAlkhalili

This is the best software engineering advice video I’ve seen in a very long while. Keep the quality content coming please.

@michelfabien3553

1. Get better at reading code
2. Better a better writer (clear and concisely)
3. Improve your programming skills
4. Become a person people want to be around (listen and work with others) 
5. Sunshine your mistakes loudly and learn from them
6. Involve yourself in initiatives that are aligned with your strengths and interests

@joeybrown3853

I am about four months into my first software engineering job and I am the most junior member of my team. Every single day I feel like a total idiot and really struggle with self-doubt. Thank you so much for making this video. It helps me immensely to know that because I am already doing a lot of what you've laid out here -- I am on the right track.

@laszlo3547

I feel like the same advice is true for most fields, not only programming.

@theemoryquince

Thank you for this video! As someone who is starting at 38 yrs old, I've definitely thought a time or two: "I'm probably not going to be the best at this." But we keep pushing, though, and that's what's important💪🏽💪🏽

@TurbanTrap

this is some good advice, loved the editing too! 
hope you continue making more videos likes this..

@fernandopimenton

There need to be more videos like this. Most programming philosophy content creators are very braggadocios and leave you more confused, anxious and defeated than before. This is probably the only one that has actually given me motivation.

@ITGirlll

Love that someone else talks about these facts! Most ppl try to pretend they're such great programmers & never struggled, thanks for being real.

@maltezoa

A friend of mine fully failed every single coding portion of his interview... coding wise. He literally said he had no fucking clue how to do any of the questions. Only reason why he was still hired was due to the fact that he could communicate really well (which lets be honest in this field is more uncommon than we'd think) which would be integral to him learning as he goes in the job.

@usernotfound______6712

Im in an internship rn where i dont do any real coding mostly testing and writing queries but im getting tons of documentation practice and this made me feel me feel better about the stuff ive learned because i was down on myself for feeling behind in the coding aspect

@EngineeringwithUtsav

This popped up on my feed today. Good stuff, Namanh. Quality doesn't go unnoticed... well,  mostly... except when they change the damn algorithm to promote mindless 15-second content. ;) Keep it up!

@AxleWack

There are way more developers out there that have "imposter syndrome" than they like to admit to. Every developer has some kind of weakness. I know of some genuinely SUPER developers, and even they have told me they suffer from "Imposter Syndrome"...Which was shocking to hear! As you said, as long as you are trying to improve, be honest and own up to any mistakes, you will do just fine! To anyone with "Imposter Syndrome", We all started from nothing, got some where, knew a little, and STILL google! Your not the only one! ;-) We are all Unicorns! Awesome video man!

@roywastaken

You a real one for this!

@Shiroyashasama

Failing the easy leetcode is so relatable 😭 and I’m out here thinking I’m a stupid student especially since I have some interviews later this week and I KNOW I will do horrible.

@koustubh7476

Exactly what I needed to hear, I get overwhelmed often about all the things that are not happening in a single go. Definitely practice makes you better, I need to believe in that more. Thanks for posting :)

@PoojaDutt

Awesome video, as usual! Super stoked to see the how this channel grows! 😀

@BloodSoldierRB

Amazing video brother, I legit am doing my first internship ever and with a big tech company. Always feel I got lucky making it this far and that I'm underperforming daily or my team will find out I'm secretly really bad at my job. Just doing a lot of learning but your point about 'being used to having stuff given to you, structured' is hella relevant from people going school directly into the workforce. Everything is solo, and you outlined that process very well. Good to know im not alone

@janmillenserna2147

This is the best advice for someone who’s trying their best to learn, not only about programming, but any other aspects, man. No bs like, “you need to dream in codes” or any other “advice” that literally pressure you to have a progress.

@bioman2007

AWESOME video. There is this misconception on software engineering where everyone needs to be "Silincon valley level engineers" (whatever that means) to be successful engineers. That can trigger a lot of impostor syndrome in a person. The thing is... we are just normal people trying to make for a living, and it's ok to choose whatever path you want for your life.