Process
This C # language learning is a language that you have learned and has a clear idea during the learning process. Let's share your learning process.
When I first started to learn C # language, I did not come to school. Instead, I first made a plan to complete C # language learning as a project, define the task and time of each stage. The self-developed plan is roughly as follows:
After each stage of learning is developed, you can start learning by yourself. For a plan, it is sometimes painful to implement it, mainly because the acceptance criteria for each stage are not well developed and there is no good method to complete the measurement at this stage. The existence of this problem sometimes makes me feel like I have finished learning at this stage, or the time is approaching. So, my progress should be faster,, there is no basis for quick learning, so I can't learn anything, so I simply have to catch up with the progress, so that I have done a lot of useless work, so that I have a great waste of time and energy, this is a big problem. The current solution is to develop the acceptance criteria for each stage.
The last sentence of this article is that the plan is used to break the plan, not to carry out the plan in a static manner.
Harvesting Technology
You can take a look at the previous technical summary:
. Net learning summary.
In the process of learning C #, I have a better understanding of object-oriented ideas, such:
I also learned some basic knowledge about C #, such:
There are still many questions about the features of C # language. I plan to learn these questions in the future. The summary is as follows:
Learning Methods
When learning new things, we should first take this thing as a whole for learning; then, we should learn the things in it. For the things in it, we must first implement modular modules of different categories; then, it's okay if you don't fully understand it ).
Summary
C #'s learning has come to an end, but it is not over yet. I understand C # on the big surface, but I still have a lot of deficiencies in. NET Framework (you can ignore the language runtime first), or I haven't really started!
One sentence, two words: Come on!