BBassic
I changed this.
- Jul 28, 2011
- 13,062
From my experience, coding is far more down to aptitude than language. When I started (nearly 40 years ago), all the investment was around finding people with right aptitude. Languages and technologies come and go, but the only thing that is constant throughout is logic and whether you can deal with complex logic. Learning to code doesn't necessarily result in a good coder (see KZN post 3 up)
I'm sure there are aptitude tests around still that may help (although there are other indicators such as a pasty complexion, few friends, Personal Hygiene etc )
Definitely this.
If you enjoy puzzles and making something out of nothing but can also endure the occasional period of mind-numbing tedium where you're just writing variations on the same old stuff then it's a great career.