2-Minute Rule to Become a Master at Coding — Atomic Habits

<p>Have you ever started watching an online video tutorial and, in the middle of that video, the tutorial becomes boring for you? Or you always tell yourself that this time you&rsquo;re going to finish an online course, but when you sit down and start learning, it feels like any other tedious task like washing dishes and laundry. And at the end, you find it impossible to stay productive and make progress.</p> <p>The question is: &ldquo;<strong>How can I stay motivated when learning to code?</strong>&rdquo;</p> <p>That&rsquo;s when&nbsp;<strong>Atomic Habits</strong>&nbsp;by&nbsp;<strong>James Clear</strong>&nbsp;comes in. If you haven&rsquo;t heard about this book, you probably aren&rsquo;t into self-improvement books by any chance. In this book,&nbsp;<strong>James Clear</strong>&nbsp;answers questions like, What is a habit loop? How do I prime my environment to make progress on my goals? and How do I use Dopamine spikes to stick to good habits?</p> <p>By answering these questions, I will show you how you can build the revolutionary habit of learning programming.</p> <p>Let&rsquo;s delve in&hellip;</p> <p>&hellip;</p> <p>Imagine a plane taking off from Los Angeles for New York. Just before takeoff, the pilot changes the flight path by&nbsp;<strong>3.5 degrees,</strong>&nbsp;which is trivial. It is such a small change that nobody in the place can notice anything. When the plane lands, the passengers find themselves doing a sniff test because they are walking on the clean streets of Washington, DC, instead of New York. The point is that very small changes can entirely change the trajectory of our lives. And just like the passengers, we do not see the immediate results of these changes, but in the long run, the combined effect of these tiny changes and the final outcome can be significantly different.</p> <p><a href="https://halimshams.medium.com/2-minute-rule-to-become-a-master-at-coding-atomic-habits-ec5d48d1a3ba"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>
Tags: Atomic Habits