Starting this week, some of Durham’s Free Software Skill-Sharers will be learning to program together. We’ve formed a small study group which will have face-to-face meet-ups for peer support, and we’ll be keeping in touch by email as well.
At the moment we’re open to more people joining in – if you’d like to give it a try, join in the conversation on our mailing list (read the archives to see what’s happening, then subscribe and post a message to the list). This is completely free of charge, but comes with no guarantees; we’re just some people doing it because we want to.
We’re going to be learning a language called Python, using a book called “Learn Python the Hard Way” which is available for free on the internet. The name is inaccurate – the author is just making a point that you need to practise in order to get good at anything. It is suitable for people who have never programmed before.
With the new national curriculum, kids have to learn to program in school from a very young age, so this is an opportunity to be able to help your grandchildren / children / buddies / self with your homework (depending on how old you are), or just to be able to say, “Aha, let Grandma show you how I’d do that in python”.
People give many different reasons for learning to program (also know as learning to code) including:
- self-directed learning looks good on your CV
- it could lead to higher study or employment in IT
- it enables you to make your own programs which work just how you want
- you learned how to program in BASIC on the BBC Micro and you want to know what’s changed since then
- it teaches problem-solving
- it provides a way in to an understanding of the world of information
- it is a creative act that demands no other justification
We’re just starting now, so it won’t take you long to catch up… just start at the beginning of the book and let’s see where it leads us…