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So, are you ready to start your journey into the world of computer programming?
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So, sit back comfortably, eliminate your distractions, close that WhatsApp, press start and let's get started.
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Hello, little grasshopper.
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Welcome to the first lesson of your long-awaited Python video course.
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My name is Gustavo Guanabara, I am your teacher and in this first class of the Python
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course, we will do phase one, where I will answer the following question: why are you a programmer?
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If you arrived here, it's probably because you are already a subscriber to the channel, welcome again.
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Or because you received the link to this playlist from someone who really cares about
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you. go to that person and say: "Thank you very much for the recommendation, because
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today, at this moment, you can start a new career in your life, a new journey that will take you to your next profession.
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And don't be surprised.
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If you already have a profession, you may end up thinking about changing it in the medium and long term.
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This is because programming is a great passion in my life and I try to bring all of
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this into the classroom with my students.
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And now you are my little grasshopper, you are my virtual student on the Curso em Vídeo channel.
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And after the welcome, I will give you important information about the programming
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industry, which will make you understand a little more about why the programming
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industry is necessary and why we need new programmers.
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And when I say us, I'm not talking about us programmers, us businesspeople, no.
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I'm talking about us, humanity.
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Humanity needs you, it needs people who know how to program or who at least know the language of programming.
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Let's talk a little more about this during this class.
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First of all, let's look at a statistic from a non-profit organization called code.org.
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It is an American initiative, an initiative from the United States that tries to encourage
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the creation of schools, the expansion of programming teaching to the greatest number
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of people, including reducing the age range of first contact with programming.
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Which means that perhaps a 5, 7, 8 year old child can already have their first contact with programming.
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Of course, at a slightly lower level, but yes, this is all possible to train the next generation of programmers.
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And this is necessary because, according to code.org, in 10 years we will need 1.4 million programmers.
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Yes, you got it right. In 10 years, we will need almost 15 and a half million people who know how to program.
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And the big problem with this is, if we continue, according to this research, at the
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same rate of training that we have today, we will only have 400,000 people who know how to program.
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And you don't need to be a mathematician to realize that in 10 years we will have a deficit of 1 million programmers.
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That is, we will have 1 million fewer programmers than we needed.
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And if you think I'm exaggerating or that this number is wrong, take a look here.
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Today we apply programming where?
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And if your answer is simple enough for computers and notebooks, then you are wrong.
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You know that what's in your pocket, or maybe even in your hand, your cell phone, your smartphone, requires programming.
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It has features that your cell phone didn't have a few years ago, because you know
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that inside your cell phone there is an operating system, it was formatted, it has
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programs, this is all created by programmers.
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And it doesn't just stop there.
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Do you like playing that game, a PlayStation, an Xbox, Wi?
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Now there's the Nintendo Switch.
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How do you think these games are created?
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Exactly by programmers.
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And where are you going to turn on your video game?
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On your smart TV.
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And do you think she has that name?
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Smart.
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Why?
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There's software inside.
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So much so that now you can access YouTube, Netflix, you can schedule things, it has
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access to location, your appointment calendar and many other things.
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This was all thought up and implemented by programmers.
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And the wearables, those wearables, that technology that is emerging now with smart watches, right?
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Watches that monitor your daily life, that receive notifications from your cell phone,
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or more advanced wearables, such as virtual reality or augmented reality glasses.
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All of this that appears here, I'm sorry to inform you, we need programmers to be able to create all of this.
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And at the rate that's happening right now when I'm recording this video, intelligent things are appearing every day.
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Where will this end?
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So, I'm now showing you a market that in 10 years will be exploding with needs.
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How about now you use your spare time to learn how to program?
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This is my proposal.
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This is my invitation.
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And in fact, I'm not the one making this invitation, no.
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There's a guy coming who's going to invite you in a special way.
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Pay attention.
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If we want America to stay on the cutting edge, we need young Americans like you to
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master the tools and technology that will change the way we do just about everything.
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That's why I'm asking you to get involved.
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Don't just buy a new video game.
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Make one.
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Don't just download the latest app.
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Help design it.
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Don't just play on yourone program.
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No one's born a computer scientist, but with little hard work and some math and science, just about anyone can become one.
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This week is your chance to give it a shot and don't let anyone tell you you can't. maintenance.
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I'll tell you, this concern in the United States is even a little less than the concern we have here in Brazil.
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This is because we train far fewer programmers than they do there.
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So the need will be much more urgent here.
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Or else we're going to hand this market over to those who are worried about it.
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United States, China, India.
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Are you going to stop earning your rich money?
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Because our government, which should represent us, doesn't care about this situation.
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They're more concerned with pointing the finger in someone else's face, saying who
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did something wrong, when in fact we know that everyone's tail is tied up.
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But let's stop with this talk about politics, that kind of thing, because that doesn't lead anywhere in here.
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I'm going to show you smart things that are emerging now, that are in need of programmers right now and later too.
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I'm going to show you a really cool event.
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You know that in the United States and even some places in Brazil, we have thermostats inside the house.
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If you live in the South, you probably have a thermostat.
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It turns out that these thermostats are kind of weird, right?
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You turn it on, off, set the temperature you want and leave it on.
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Sometimes you have to remember that you left the house and left it on, everything comes back.
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It's a big problem.
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With this in mind, smart objects were created, like the one shown in the video.
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It can understand and you can also configure its behavior.
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What time do I want him to call?
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What time do I want it to turn off?
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If I am or if I am not at home.
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If I leave the house due to the distance from my cell phone, it can sense that no
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one else is home and turns off the thermostat.
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When I'm getting close, it can turn on again so that the temperature is at the temperature
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I want, when I get home, at the temperature I like.
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It has a geolocation record, external temperature, all done intelligently.
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And this project is so cool that it was bought by Google a few years ago, which is Nest.
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And now he's part of Alphabet.
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This is just to give some examples of what many companies are worrying about out there.
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Another very famous case is self-driving cars.
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This project that you will see on the screen is one of the self-driving cars that started it all, right?
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It's one of the first, it wasn't the first, but it's one of the first that's really
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cool, which is Google's self drive car, which is a car completely controlled by algorithms, controlled by programs.
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And if you're scared, you said: "Wow, but then I could have an accident, accidents
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with it are much smaller than accidents caused by human error.
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In a while you will be in your house and you won't have your car.
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You'll say: "I need to go to the gym, I need to go to college, to school."
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A car will pick you up, drop you off at school and leave to pick up someone else.
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And all this without any driver.
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You can also see on the screen the algorithm working to avoid obstacles, avoid cyclists on the street.
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This is all automatically controlled by algorithms.
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And when all the cars on the street, but in a much longer future, they all have this
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system, they will start to notice each other, start exchanging information about,
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I don't know, 1 km from now in a traffic jam, your car that just entered the traffic jam will warn all the cars behind.
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This all needs software, this all needs programmers.
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There's a phrase that I really like.
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I will share it here with you.
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Just look.
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Everyone in this country should learn to program, because it teaches us how to think.
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More than learning to program, you have to learn to be creative, to reason, to solve problems.
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This is all programming will bring you.
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Even if you don't want to continue in the field, you have to know programming nowadays
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so you can invent things, create things and know how to ask a programmer for what you need.
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The person who said this phrase here was one of the most visionary guys I know, Steve Jobs.
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Unfortunately he is no longer with us, but he certainly made an immense contribution
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to the field of technology and especially to design and programming.
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And as I was saying earlier, there are advantages to learning to program.
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I'm not talking here about becoming a millionaire, earning a lot of money and taking a lot of trips.
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Of course this happens in some cases, but this is just a side effect.
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Those who learn to program and learn it well also end up learning how to solve problems quickly and concisely.
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That's smarter.
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You'll see that when you start learning to program, you'll start to take those bigger
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problems and start breaking them down into small pieces and solving them little by little.
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And if you already do this in your life, you will do very well with programming.
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Anyone who learns to program becomes more creative, reasoning improves, you can invent things, you can be more inventive.
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Another thing a programmer has is a great community spirit.
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He can share things, he learns to work together, to take things from others and to share what you created.
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This course you are about to start is essentially based on a language where the ultimate principle is this: sharing.
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And don't be surprised if when you start learning to program, when you start to gain
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speed, gain experience, you will start to learn other things more quickly.
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This is because your brain, when it is awakened by programming, it never returns to its previous state.
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And if you've ever thought about programming before and talked to someone, some unsuspecting
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people will certainly say that there are certain prerequisites.
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The most common are two.
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There are a lot of people who ask me: "What's up, but to learn how to program, I don't need to know a lot of English?"
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Or things like: "Programming doesn't involve a lot of mathematical concepts?
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I don't need to be a master of mathematics or physics."
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I'm telling you, you don't need any of this.
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And I'll tell you more, do you know what involves a lot of mathematics and a lot of language?
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Your life.
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The simple fact that you open Netflix or access YouTube or you access Twitter or Facebook
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or send messages via Telegram or WhatsApp, you are certainly applying in English.
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And if you can save and rewrite and memorize these words, you will definitely memorize
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the words I have to teach you in this course.
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Don't worry about English, much less math.
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Every time you go to the cinema, buy some popcorn, get your change, calculate the
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money that your cousin owes you, or calculate in your head how many kilometers you
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can still drive in your car with that little bit of fuel that missing, you are applying mathematics to your life.
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So don't worry.
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Programming uses English and mathematics.
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Use as much as you already use in your life.
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And I'm going to tell you, there are a lot of people who have already started learning
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to program and ended up stopping at some myths in the IT sector, in the technology sector.
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The question we sometimes ask ourselves is like, am I too old for this?
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Or maybe I'm just too young to start learning to program?
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And I'll tell you, there is no age to start programming.
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I believe that a person, from the moment they have motor coordination, are starting
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to get used to things in life, they can start learning to program.
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Older people who already have more experience can apply this experience within the programming field.
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Everything is an advantage and nothing is wasted.
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Another question that comes up and down I come across at events or even here on YouTube
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or in my classroom are silly statements like: "But programming is a man's thing.
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I am a woman.
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Programming is not a man's thing.
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Programming is not a woman's thing.
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Programming is for smart people.
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You're smart, aren't you?
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So come learn to program.
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Other questions are: "Ah, but I live in a very distant city, there is no market here, gentlemen.
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There is a technology market everywhere nowadays.
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Even the simplest little store in the interior, in the interior of the interior.
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Whenever I travel to a lot of places, there is a computer.
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And if you don't have it yet, you will in a few years.
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Your learning and programming process can start overnight, but it won't end in that time.
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You will need to invest, dedicate yourself to the process of learning to program.
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Another statement that I've heard a lot is: "But am I from another area?
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Why do I have to learn to program?"
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And we'll talk a little more about this at the end of this class.
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But I'm going to tell you, all these statements here are flawed.
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If you really want to and will make the effort to learn how to program, come with
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me and you will definitely be successful in your endeavor.
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Now, not everything is rosy and I've already made a selection here of the main obstacles
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that most people end up facing when they decide to learn to program.
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The first and most serious one is the lack of commitment.
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If you want to learn to program, you have to have the same commitment that you had
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when you wanted to learn to ride a bike.
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Remember?
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It was difficult, but it was so cool that you persisted.
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And when you decided to play the guitar and saw that your fingers were covered in
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calluses, that it was difficult to put your finger on the nut, isn't that difficult?
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But you persisted, didn't you?
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Everything we really want in life ends up having its moments of difficulty.
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What you can't do is give up.
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Another big problem for those learning to program is being in a hurry.
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The guy wants to start overnight, he ends up getting a lot of ready-made code from the internet.
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Oh, I need to, I don't know, validate a CPF.
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Instead of you learning what the process is so you can learn how to do it, the guy wants to rush.
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So, he goes on the internet, takes it, that's it, applies it and that's it.
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He will never learn again, because everything is already ready on the internet.
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The big problem is that the market will not absorb this type of professional or if
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it does, they will find themselves without a job very quickly.
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Because the market doesn't need someone to copy, the market needs someone to create.
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So go for me.
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There's no point in rushing.
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There are people who say: "I want to learn as many languages as possible in as few months as possible."
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That's not how it works, my dear.
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Focus on one thing, learn well and then you evolve.
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Exercise.
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I always tell my students before class, I don't know the formula for success for learning
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programming, but I know the formula for failure.
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The formula for failure is not practicing.
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This course you're watching now, which is about to start, is full of exercises, guys.
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There are many, many, many exercises proposed and I will not answer all of them.
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So, you will need to make an effort and do the exercises.
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I've already said it 1 million times here on the channel, there's no point in putting
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your hand on your chin, pressing play and staying there on your cell phone.
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It's here, oh.
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Oops.
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Then the notification on WhatsApp begins.
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Then you open the notification and you're listening to the video while you're talking
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to people and nothing will be learned in the end.
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And you'll say: "But programming is difficult."
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No, you're the one who didn't dedicate yourself enough, didn't use the right technique
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to learn and then you're complaining about life.
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Value this foundation I'm giving you.
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This course is completely designed to have no prerequisites.
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All you have to do is play this video and watch and practice, and by the end of this
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course you will definitely learn how to program in Python.
00:18:11
Another big mistake for those who are starting to learn to program is thinking they already know everything.
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I'm going to tell you a secret.
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I have been in the profession for 20 years.
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In fact, I'm going to be in the profession for 22 years.
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And in these 22 years of profession, I don't know everything about programming.
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And I also don't know everything about programming a given language.
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The exercise and practice of humility is very important for a good professional.
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I don't know good arrogant programmers, but the vast majority of programmers I know
00:18:42
who are humble are excellent and are working at large companies.
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Just take a look here on the channel, see how many programmers I know, they're really cool.
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Some I have already interviewed.
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Take a look at where they are now.
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Take a look at where you are and see if you might have the right to be arrogant.
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Here's a tip.
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So, that's the principle.
00:19:05
Whenever someone says or asks you, from now on, is programming difficult?
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Your answer after this video will be no.
00:19:14
Programming is not easy, but it is far from difficult.
00:19:17
How do you think these guys here became successful?
00:19:21
Bill Gates, Drew Houston, Gabe New, Mark Zuckerberg?
00:19:25
Maybe you don't know all of them.
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Let me introduce you quickly.
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The first Bill Gates is one of the most famous.
00:19:30
The first and last are usually the most famous.
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First created Microsoft, the last created Facebook.
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Drew Houston, who's right next to Bill Gates, was the guy who created Dropbox and
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Gabe New is the master, he's the brain behind Valve.
00:19:45
All these guys here have one thing in common and if you're thinking, they're millionaires, you're right.
00:19:52
But that wasn't all.
00:19:53
They are also programmers at their core.
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And they have a great message that I want to pass on to you here.
00:20:00
Programming is not easy.
00:20:01
You just can't be in a hurry.
00:20:03
You have to start with the simplest things, which is exactly where we are about to start.
00:20:08
Don't lose your patience.
00:20:09
Don't think everything is too simple.
00:20:11
Don't feel like you can skip steps.
00:20:14
Make a program to write Hello World.
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I don't need it.
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Go through the experience.
00:20:19
And I'm not the one saying that, no.
00:20:21
The four of them are the ones who are going to tell you this.
00:20:24
Just take a look. a computer.
00:20:30
I a pram toc I think it was pretty humble beginnings.
00:20:34
I think the first program I wrote asked things like what's your favorite color or how old are you?
00:20:40
The first time I actually had something come up and say hello world and I made a computer do that.
00:20:45
It was just astonishing.
00:20:47
Learning how a program didn't start off as wanting to learn all of computer science
00:20:51
or one or trying to master this discipline or anything like that.
00:20:54
It just started off because I wanted to do this one simple thing.
00:20:57
I want to make something that was fun for myself and and my sisters and I wrote this
00:21:01
little program and then basically just added a little bit to it and then when I needed
00:21:05
to learn something new I looked it up either in a book or on the internet and then added a little bit to it.
00:21:09
It's really not unlike kind of playing an instrument or something or you know or playing
00:21:14
a sportion subtraction uh that that's about it.
00:21:17
Even if you want to become a race car driver or play baseball um or uh you know build
00:21:23
a house all of these things have been turned upside down by software.
00:21:27
We all depend on technology to communicate to bank information and none of us know how to read and write code.
00:21:37
To be able to actually come up with an idea and then see it in your hands and then
00:21:42
be able to press a button and have it be in millions of people's hands.
00:21:46
I mean, I think we're the first generation in the world that's really ever had that kind of experience.
00:21:50
Just to think that I mean you can start something in you know your college dorm room
00:21:54
and you can have a set of people who haven't built a big company before coming together
00:21:59
and built something that a billion people use as part of their daily lives lives is just crazy to think about, right?
00:22:05
It's really it's humbling and it's amazing.
00:22:07
The programmers of tomorrow are the wizards of the future.
00:22:10
You know, you're going to look like you have magic powers compared to everybody else.
00:22:13
I think it's amazing.
00:22:23
It saw?
00:22:24
You have to start with easier.
00:22:26
They also started.
00:22:27
And when you learn to program, you will be able to choose between several areas.
00:22:32
Programmers nowadays work in several areas.
00:22:35
I'll see some simpler ones here, the most common of them.
00:22:38
More common is having that traditional desktop programmer, the guy who makes the programs, right?
00:22:43
You use Word, Excel, Windows in your daily life, this guy, this software was created by a desktop programmer.
00:22:50
Or you are always accessing websites, applications that use the web, then you also
00:22:54
have a web programmer, who is the guy who will act on the internet, programming for the internet.
00:22:59
Another thing that is very common, I just said, mobile applications.
00:23:02
The programmer for mobile devices, he creates things, mainly for cell phones and smaller devices.
00:23:08
We also have Internet of Things or IoT programmers.
00:23:13
So, if you have internet on your television, on your watch, on your alarm clock, on
00:23:19
your thermostat, in your car, this is all called the Internet of Ths.
00:23:24
Everything I said is connected to the internet, it will talk to your cell phone, to your computer.
00:23:28
These are systems that we call embedded systems.
00:23:31
There are also programmers who specialize in this.
00:23:34
There is also the programmer who gets involved in the gaming rambo to create games.
00:23:37
As I said before, all of this is created inside the computer.
00:23:40
And nothing stops you from having several careers like this.
00:23:43
Start as a desktop developer, then go to the web, or start on the web, then go to
00:23:47
mobile, start working on both, or go to the Internet of things, then go to games.
00:23:52
Nothing stops it.
00:23:53
The basis is essentially the same.
00:23:56
And it all starts with your programming course.
00:23:59
Basically what I'm going to teach you is a new language.
00:24:02
You don't go to school, you don't go to college, learn English, learn Spanish.
00:24:06
Have you ever noticed that, for example, when you speak English it is more difficult than when you learn Spanish?
00:24:13
Have you ever asked yourself why?
00:24:14
You're probably thinking about this now, and you say: "Ah, but Spanish is a little easier than English?"
00:24:19
No, it is easier for us because we were literate in a Latin language.
00:24:24
We have Latin as a base.
00:24:26
Of course no one here went to school to take Latin classes.
00:24:29
I think maybe your grandmother or great-grandmother went, but you didn't go.
00:24:34
But when you learn the essence of the Portuguese language, many of the things that
00:24:39
the essence of Spanish has are very similar to our essence.
00:24:43
That's why you feel easy.
00:24:44
And when you and your computer have to communicate, there is a big problem.
00:24:49
This is because the language that passes between these two devices, you know, and your computer, are different.
00:24:57
You understand words, you understand numbers, combinations of all of that.
00:25:01
The computer only understands zeros and ones.
00:25:04
They are bits.
00:25:05
And then you'll say: "But Babara, who translates all this?"
00:25:08
Those who translate all of this are the automated tools that we have today, but those
00:25:13
who control these automated tools for this translation are the programmers.
00:25:17
It is exactly this essence that you have to learn.
00:25:20
And once you learn the gist, you can learn another language.
00:25:24
So, for example, you're about to take a Python course with me.
00:25:27
If you learn Python, learn the essence of Python, you can move on to any other programming language.
00:25:34
Here, a lot of names are appearing that, if you've never heard of them, you'll start to hear from now on.
00:25:39
But you have names like Java, C++, PHP, Ruby, Swift, ASP, JS, which is JavaScript.
00:25:48
All these guys here follow the same essence.
00:25:52
All these elements here follow the same base.
00:25:55
It is the basis of the essence of programming.
00:25:58
I decided to give you this essence in a very simple language that has become very famous in recent years.
00:26:05
Her name Python.
00:26:07
But we're not actually going to speak Python.
00:26:09
We're going to talk about Python, which is a word in English, but it's completely possible for you to understand.
00:26:14
In the next class I'll tell you where this name came from.
00:26:17
Why is it called Python?
00:26:18
Why is it different from other languages?
00:26:21
What's better about her than others?
00:26:23
What's worse about her than the others?
00:26:25
What is the same about it?
00:26:27
There is no language better than others.
00:26:29
There are languages that meet certain needs, but I only want to go into this subject
00:26:34
in the next video, because this one is already damn long.
00:26:38
I'm very happy that you arrived here on the channel.
00:26:41
I hope you subscribe.
00:26:43
So all you have to do is click on subscribe, right?
00:26:45
It's somewhere here in the interface.
00:26:47
Or you go to our YouTube channel and subscribe to receive notifications.
00:26:51
So be logged in, sign up.
00:26:53
Whenever there is a new video, you will be notified.
00:26:56
This course is not complete, I don't know when you are watching it, but probably if
00:27:00
you are watching it close to the launch, not all classes are on air.
00:27:03
In fact, I don't even have the money to take this entire course and I really need your help.
00:27:09
So, right away, access the website here, o, cursovideo.com and at the top you click on be a supporter.
00:27:15
Inside the supporter area there is a link for you to help this Python course continue.
00:27:21
And do an exercise there. Get the number of views this video has at this moment.
00:27:27
If each one gave a lower value in the area of contribution, we would already be able to have a fully ready course.
00:27:34
So, we need the educational community.
00:27:38
This course is being done completely free of charge, but it has professionals involved, it has visual effects production.
00:27:45
You can see that everything appears beautiful, dynamic on the screen.
00:27:49
This is all to make your learning easier, but I really need your help.
00:27:54
But this isn't the only class I've taken from this course for now, no.
00:27:58
I took some classes, recorded them and they are already available on our channel,
00:28:02
on our website, but there comes a time, you will watch, there will come a time when they will stop.
00:28:07
If you happen to be watching at some other time and the course is complete, it is
00:28:12
a sign that this community worked, that people in Brazil do believe in education.
00:28:18
And I'm extremely proud of that.
00:28:20
Now, if not all classes are live, give us some help, go to cursovideo.com, click on be a supporter and be a supporter.
00:28:30
C really needs our help to become a successful programmer and we need your help to be able to help you.
00:28:38
And we won't just help you, no.
00:28:39
We are going to help an entire community.
00:28:42
And it is from there, from the moment you understand this principle, that you begin
00:28:48
to have the programmer's spirit, the spirit of sharing, the spirit of the community.
00:28:53
See you in the next class that is now available on the channel.
00:28:57
A big hug and see you then.