this post was submitted on 29 Sep 2024
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Programming
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Leetcode is a great way to polish your skills. When I was your age, I read programming books and made projects I cared about, it's turned out very well.
I've helped a few others learn programming, practice and working on any project at all always help more than anything.
My friends Leetcoded and Codeforced quite a lot. Advent of Code is up there too, with the interesting caveat that Advent of Code also teaches you refactoring (due to the two-part nature of every problem).
However, when I was younger I had contempt for the whiteboard-problem-esque appearances of these, but everyone is different.
If you look hard enough there is always a project at medium difficulty -- not way too hard, like a huge project you feel won't give you returns -- not way too easy, like some cowsay clone. Ever tried making a blog? You can host for free on most Git pages implementations (codeberg, github, gitlab...).
As for programming books, consider trying security books like Art of Exploitation -- in the same strain, CTFs can use a decent amount of code, and they're fun in terms of raw problem-solving. I started with the Bandit wargame, which does Linux problem solving from any machine that has SSH.
I'm not by any means a l33t hax3r but I found them pretty fun in my learning journey.
Codewars is a cool leetcode-esque thing with less of the corporate dystopia sheen.