this post was submitted on 14 Nov 2023
51 points (93.2% liked)
Programming
17534 readers
317 users here now
Welcome to the main community in programming.dev! Feel free to post anything relating to programming here!
Cross posting is strongly encouraged in the instance. If you feel your post or another person's post makes sense in another community cross post into it.
Hope you enjoy the instance!
Rules
Rules
- Follow the programming.dev instance rules
- Keep content related to programming in some way
- If you're posting long videos try to add in some form of tldr for those who don't want to watch videos
Wormhole
Follow the wormhole through a path of communities !webdev@programming.dev
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Yes, I too used to struggle with this.
Debugging
Learn how to debug. For me, it's a lifesaver for me to be able to step through some code to figure out what it actually does, instead of me trying to read the code to figure out what it may do. Yes, I do this for my own code too, because we tend to make assumptions, and I want to confirm those, always.
That means learning how to setup your IDE of choice - I presume you use vscode, so you'll then have to google for "vscode debugging". Maybe you'll have to install some addons to add the support, probably setup some
launch.json
in a local.vscode
folder. It all depends on your language of choice.Learn how to test. This goes great with debugging. I write code in Python, so I end up creating
src/
andtests/
folders.src/
for my actual code, andtests/
for my tests. I can use eitherpytest
on the terminal, or just the vscode test addons to run tests.Anyway, my tests end up being something like this:
src/my_app/main.py
or something, withsrc/my_app/__init__.py
existing to turn that folder into a module:Then in
tests/test_main.py
(mirroring thesrc/
folder; addingtest_
makes the file findable for pytest, and I call itmain
to make it easier to link to the main code):This is how I always start off with - just a simple piece of code that does a thing, and a test with almost the same name as the function I'm trying to test. I can now add a breakpoint inside
test_main
and run the test within vscode, which means I have a way of hooking into the main function.Think about the process of your application
Think about how to cut up the steps to create your application into smaller and smaller steps. Whenever something feels insurmountable, I'll just have to stop in my tracks and mentally cut up a task into smaller and smaller steps, until I feel comfortable to take some steps.
I'm a data engineer, which means I tend to write code to 'ingest' data (which means, grab it from source A and put it into target B (where B is some centralized location to store all raw data).
So the main task is:
I then have to figure out "what is the source", because that dictates how I grab the data (do I have to loop over all folders in an SFTP server? Is there a state file that makes my life easier? Do I use an API instead?)
I then start writing a small piece of code that connects to the source, or just grabs some random data to show the connection works.
So now I can grab some data. Is that data too large to ingest all at once? If a file is super large, I may not be able to hold it into data, which means using a buffer. And how many files are there to download? Should I batch those?
and this is how I slowly grow my applications from an idea "ingest all data from some source" into something that can actually run.
Now, I do have some experience and know that filesize and filecount are important to take into account, but that's something I learned along the way.
My first applications just loaded whole files into memory (a bad idea if your memory limit is 4 GB, and I'm trying to load multiple 1GB sized files into memory ๐), and taking local state (which files have I already downloaded) and external state (which one have updated or been added?) into account, etc.
Anyway, you're already on the right path: You already know a weak point, and you're smart enough to know your limits and ask for help when you're stuck. That's one of the fastest ways to grow as a programmer.