I am a junior in CS and can't even get companies to reply. I actually did most of my code as a freshman and after that its all just been learning about architecture like ram and registers, and theoretical stuff like missionaries and cannibals or O(n). I don't know how to make an actual application and all the entry level jobs I look at require me to know a bunch of tools I've never touched like azure or MySql.What do I do
>>107766656Don't they have a required class for that? You can't be this retarded.
>>107766812I guess not, the closest thing I guess was C code like making a client and server talk to each other or multi-threading. But it wasn't like an actual application that you might show off for an interview
>>107766656You are fucked (me too because I’m facing the same problem)
>>107766656You dont care about CS and programming and it shows. You are doing the bare minimum to get a passing grade. There is 0 excuse for not supplementing your studies by applying what you are learning. You can identify areas of knowledge you lack but you are too lazy or stupid to go learn them and better yourself. Your wake up call will be when you have you degree in hand and nothing to show for it and nobody will want graduate #3619 with no projects and no non-academic skills.
>>107767191I do care about CS but no I don't care about programming, I find it tedious but I figure thats how every job is even in things you're interested in. I want to do personal projects but I'm not sure what to do that would be considered good on a resume
>>107767227If you don't find joy in programming you will wake up miserable for the next 40 years of your life
>>107767227>I find it tedious but I figure thats how every job is even in things you're interested in.Nope, not the case. It seems like you don't like CS desu. You should probably switch majors. I started using MySQL when I was 7 or 8 years old to run runescape private servers. If I wasn't paid to do development I'd still do it because I find it fun, especially stuff like searching for small bugs.
>>107767291>>107767290When you say programming you mean actually typing stuff because I can't see how anyone can enjoy that, but I like understanding how things work and how it all connects. Its just the actual act of coding I don't like
>>107766869A class on to how to make proper resumes and how to do interviews, fuck.
>>107767320Yes, I mean actually typing stuff.
>>107767320I've been on this board since before the iPhone, I forgot there are people who post here without using a keyboard.
>>107766656>CS>No SQLLol, lmao even
>>107767416yeah no fucking way, how do they not teach a code monkey basic shit like databases. I don't believe it
>>107767468>>107767416we were taught databases just no code, just relationships and boolean logic.
>>107767468I talked to my QA coworkers who had comp sci degrees in india. They come out of their colleges not able to even code he said. All he learned was java. The rest sounds like comp sci 101.
>>107766656Just get baited into a hell-desk role like me and you won't even have to code even though they pay for your visual studio and dev-ops.
>>107767320Typing stuff is a very small part of it. It's knowing what to type that's important. But yes, you should be interested in what you're typing. Programming is all about creating abstractions and systems built on those abstractions. If you don't enjoy creating abstractions then you will be miserable.
>>107766656Would you consider doing a quick course in a desired technology?Just a quickie of 5 months top where you can learn to code in Java, Kotlin, C#, Python, and easy languages like that. To get you moving.
>>107770278I mean I've used all those except kotlin, its the specific things I haven't done like I don't have any experience with azure or LLM which a lot of entry jobs ask for