William Torrez Corea: > 1. Course > 2. Books > 3. Documentation > 4. Projects > > I was learning programming with a book but I quickly lost interest. My > progress is slow.
If you loose interest, then think about why you did you try, do you really want to learn a programming language and learn to program ? I learned programming because I found it to be fun. Do not forget the fun factor, is it/would it be fun for you to program ? If it isn't fun for you, know that there are other things in life that might be better suited for you. /// As others have said, an urgent need for a problem to be solved might be a good way, but the problem might be too hard for a beginner and your knowledge in the choosen language might be spotty after you finished the case. I learned programming languages from books and a few courses and applying that to various problems. Regards, /Karl Hammar -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: beginners-unsubscr...@perl.org For additional commands, e-mail: beginners-h...@perl.org http://learn.perl.org/