I've been learning Python by myself for about 3 years now and I can say that I know quite a lot but I don't really feel confident in my own programming skills and always after a while of practicing or reviewing I end up quitting because I feel exactly this.
I don't know how to explain it, but I really feel like I'm in a cycle repeating the same noob exercises over and over again.
For example, lately I have been practicing a lot PyQt but I really feel that I am wasting time when I don't learn a new concept or I don't memorize something and I need to look at my notes to remember how to do it, and also that practicing with online courses, especially with Youtube is often a challenge because the authors do things differently and I get confused by that. And when I want to learn something new the amount of information overwhelms me and I feel tired because of that.
As a Linux user I know that what I just said is stupid, because for example it is impossible to learn all the commands in the world, you just really learn the ones you use most regularly but in programming I feel that for example asking ChatGPT (or any ChatBot) counts as cheating for some reason, I don't know how to explain it.
I really consider this probably a mentality problem more than a skill problem because honestly even though I know I can I don't feel sure how to program, many times I even doubt the name of my variables or my functions.
Thanks for reading my silly post!
Dunno if this will help you feel any better or not, my field is finance so I learned VBA out of spite. There's notes in my subroutines, notes written down, websites bookmarked, all that. Sometimes I still have to google excel formulas just to make sure I'm doing them right.
I started looking at c# and python, and the only reason it even makes sense to me is because of vba. I feel like having a reason to use it and data to practice on helped a lot. And fuck, I googled for hours, upon hours, just to finally get something that I later found a much easier way for. Self learning is admirable af.
Oh, check archive.org for books on python. I find the for dummies series to be particularly helpful. I hate YouTube tutorials so I usually go for something published.
After your comment, and the comment from @[email protected] I was inspired and both of you were right! Sometimes you need a little inspiration to get things done.
The problem is that trying to do something that I have no experience yet (a Yt-DLP GUI) basically started wrong because I had not even created anything with PyQt which is huge and has thousands of classes, and now I needed to learn even more things because my concept of a Yt-DLP GUI needs to use a lot of libraries that I don't know yet, so for now I left it on standby and started with the game that I mentioned yesterday and I did it! It's easier this way, because I really only search the internet for PyQt elements, I don't mix them, and it was really easier this way!