was chatting with a friend about some of the challenges with teaching yourself programming topics:

* you have random gaps that you don’t even know about
* it's hard to assess your level, you might know a lot about one subtopic and be a total beginner elsewhere
* it's very difficult to guess what other fellow autodidacts know about the subject

I've had to learn how to suss out what shared knowledge base I have with another programmer on any given topic quickly so that we can talk

I also think a lot about what it means to be "self taught" in programming, for example I "taught myself" about how TLS works under the hood by writing a toy implementation of TLS 1.3. But I used this guide tls13.xargs.org/, and I probably could not (or would not) have done the project if that guide didn't exist

so if we want to make it easier for people to teach themselves effectively, what kinds of resources do we need to provide?

(2/?)

we have a lot of amazing "teach yourself" resources in programming (like nand2tetris or all of the great guides to writing your own compiler / programming language).

But I think a lot about -- which programming topics *don't* have great guides for how to "teach yourself" that thing? What's missing? How can we fill in the gaps?

(3/?)

@b0rk Static website generation, or at least I don't know what I can point people to as an introduction to it. Tutorials I've found don't really explain what they're doing and why.

@madewokherd @b0rk do you mean hand-coded html, or using a static site generator program?

If the former, maybe I should resurrect and update my ancient html tutorial.

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@varve @b0rk I mean using a static site generator (hand-coding wouldn't be "generation").

@madewokherd @b0rk got it. Not something I have experience with, but I will make sure to consider the "why" in any tutorials I write in the future.

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