Larry Martell wrote:
So, your experience is that the style of learning you offer is
unsuitable to anyone who doesn't have some background in algebra.
That's fine. For your course, you set the prereqs. But that's not the
only way for someone to get into coding. You do NOT have to go to
college before you start creating software. That is also not an
opinion; it's a fact backed by a number of proven instances (myself
included).

You might benefit by a course in logic. I never said that was the only way to learn. I learned (BASIC) in 8th grade too.

I started coding when I was 16, in 1975. I wrote a downhill skiing
game in basic, which I had taught to myself. I went to collage when I
was 17, and I had taught myself FORTRAN and I tested out of the class.

--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to