The First Time Code Finally Clicked

Sep 17, 2025 at 09:38
322 Views
2 Replies
Member Since Jun 05, 2025   10 posts
Sep 17, 2025 at 09:38

When I started learning to program, it felt like staring at a foreign language. I followed tutorials, copied examples, and still couldn’t see how it all connected. Then one day, after hours of frustration, I wrote a small script that actually worked, the script was to automate a boring task I used to do by hand.


That was the moment it clicked: programming isn’t about memorizing syntax, it’s about solving problems. Suddenly the language didn’t feel abstract anymore, it felt like a tool.


I wonder if others had a similar moment where the fog lifted. Was it building your first website, your first game, or just a simple script that saved you time?

Member Since Sep 17, 2025   3 posts
Oct 09, 2025 at 06:50
7OHEH posted:

When I started learning to program, it felt like staring at a foreign language. I followed tutorials, copied examples, and still couldn’t see how it all connected. Then one day, after hours of frustration, I wrote a small script that actually worked, the script was to automate a boring task I used to do by hand.


That was the moment it clicked: programming isn’t about memorizing syntax, it’s about solving problems. Suddenly the language didn’t feel abstract anymore, it felt like a tool.


I wonder if others had a similar moment where the fog lifted. Was it building your first website, your first game, or just a simple script that saved you time?


I've studied trading and also learned programming—it's honestly really tough. I'm constantly debugging, and in the end, the things that need to be remembered just have to be memorized. I feel like trading logic is actually more important; without solid logic, it's impossible to write good code.

Member Since Oct 24, 2025   21 posts
Dec 04, 2025 at 01:27

I felt the same way at the beginning.  Everything looked disconnected until I produced something that solved a real problem for me.  That first working script hits different because it combines abstract thoughts into something useful.  The "click" moment for me occurred when I created a small program to automatically arrange files.  That’s when I understood programming is just logic + problem-solving.

Sign In / Sign Up to comment
You must be connected to Myfxbook in order to leave a comment
*Commercial use and spam will not be tolerated, and may result in account termination.
Tip: Posting an image/youtube url will automatically embed it in your post!
Tip: Type the @ sign to auto complete a username participating in this discussion.