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r/programming
5.4m members
Computer Programming
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r/AskProgramming
96.6k members
A subreddit for all your programming questions.
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r/ProgrammingLanguages
86.8k members
This subreddit is dedicated to the theory, design and implementation of programming languages.
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r/learnprogramming
3.8m members
A subreddit for all questions related to programming in any language.
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r/ProgrammerHumor
2.9m members
Dedicated to humor and jokes relating to programmers and programming.
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r/C_Programming
138k members
The subreddit for the C programming language
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r/ProgrammingBuddies
46.8k members
A place for people to group up to learn and teach programming to each other.
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r/cscareerquestions
1.0m members
A subreddit for those with questions about working in the tech industry or in a computer-science-related job.
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r/GraphicsProgramming
32.0k members
A subreddit for everything related to the design and implementation of graphics rendering code.
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r/linux_programming
26.1k members
Everything related to GNU/Linux/UNIX/POSIX (system) programming and tools.
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r/Python
1.1m members
News about the programming language Python. If you have something to teach others post here. If you have questions or are a newbie use r/learnpython
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r/gamedev
1.1m members
All things related to game development, programming, math, art, music, business, and marketing.
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r/ProgrammingPrompts
10.8k members
This is a subreddit for programmers to share simple project ideas to help those who are beginning to gain experience and those who are experienced to stay sharp.
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r/programmingHungary
9.1k members
Minden, ami a programozással, UI/UX dizájnnal és a magyar IT-szektorral kapcsolatos! // All about programming, UI/UX design and the Hungarian IT industry!
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r/haskell
74.4k members
The Haskell programming language community. Daily news and info about all things Haskell related: practical stuff, theory, types, libraries, jobs, patches, releases, events and conferences and more...
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r/ProgrammingJobs
1.1k members
Programming jobs of all types
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r/eli5_programming
3.7k members
This subreddit is for decoding the esoteric concepts of programming and web development by using the most simple terms and explanations possible.
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r/rust
233k members
A place for all things related to the Rust programming language—an open-source systems language that emphasizes performance, reliability, and productivity.
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r/compsci
2.2m members
Computer Science Theory and Application. We share and discuss any content that computer scientists find interesting. People from all walks of life welcome, including hackers, hobbyists, professionals, and academics.
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r/programminghorror
308k members
Share strange or straight-up awful code.
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r/javascript
2.3m members
All about the 𝚓𝚊𝚟𝚊𝚜𝚌𝚛𝚒𝚙𝚝 programming language!
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r/coding
512k members
Welcome to r/coding
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r/web_programming
13.8k members
A subreddit for all things web programming, if your into the behind the scenes of web or the front end, links to resources, questions about coding, advice from the pro's, only a few rules, no nswf or 18+ content, no requests for anything designed to circumvent security or legal boundries and DONT ADVERTISE YOUR SERVICES
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r/FreeEBOOKS
2.3m members
Find great free ebooks!
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r/webdev
1.6m members
A community dedicated to all things web development: both front-end and back-end. For more design-related questions, try /r/web_design.
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r/programmingmemes
16.4k members
You know...for memes... about programming...
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r/programmingtools
9.0k members
Discover useful Programming Tools!
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r/computerscience
344k members
Welcome to r/ComputerScience - subreddit dedicated to such topics like algorithms, computation, theory of languages, theory of programming, some software engineering, AI, cryptography, information theory, computer architecture etc.
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r/ruby
79.6k members
Celebrate the weird and wonderful Ruby programming language with us!
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r/ProgrammingPals
8.6k members
We're experienced developers that collaborate to build and ship useful software.
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Posted by16 days ago
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558 comments
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Posted by20 days ago
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Posted by23 days ago
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Posted by2 months ago
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Posted by14 days ago

I had a well-earning job and was making my way up the career ladder in an industry that didn't fulfil me and was just super stressful. I've been wanting to learn programming, but I was very tired and stressed from work all the time and never had the energy to do courses.

At work, we sometimes needed to use Excel and SQL, and that was my favourite part of the job. I ended up going way above what is needed to carry out my duties and becoming advanced in both. I have built sheets and queries that allowed us to significantly shorten the time spent on the most complex tasks. I enjoyed writing long, complex formulas and queries and people would be surprised I didn't specialise in computer science at school.

I'm learning python now and really enjoying it. I'm super excited. Sometimes though I have this feeling of dread because I fear that AI will replace programming in the near future. Other times I'm not scared programmers will be replaced completely soon, but that I'm too new and only very experienced programmers will be safe from AI very soon, and I'm not experienced at all.

I have a nice place that I rent out and I'm still making decent money while I do online python courses. It's less the money that I'm worried about and more worried about the time I spend learning a skill that I might end up not using.

What do you think about learning to code while we're entering the age of AI? Am I making a mistake? Should I beg my employer to take me back? My current job (I'm still serving my notice) would not be replaced by AI anytime soon.

Edit: Surprised to see that the post attracted so much attention. I really appreciate many of the comments, even some which are quite critical. There's a lot of useless noise in the comments section as well however and I'm trying to find the comments that I should thank or reply to and get more helpful information. Thank you to whoever cared and took some time to write something they believe will add value to my experience.

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Posted by2 months ago
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