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Dev.to US tech 2026-06-26 18:57

数学が苦手だったためプログラミングを学ばなかったかもしれない

原題: I Almost Didn't Learn Programming Because I Was Bad at Math

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分析結果

カテゴリ
IT
重要度
62
トレンドスコア
24
要約
著者は数学が苦手だったため、プログラミングを学ぶことに対して不安を抱いていた。しかし、プログラミングは数学だけでなく、論理的思考や問題解決能力を重視するものであることに気づき、挑戦することを決意した。最終的に、プログラミングを学ぶことで自信を持ち、スキルを向上させることができた。
キーワード
For a long time, I thought programming wasn't for people like me. Not because I wasn't interested in technology. Not because I didn't enjoy solving problems. But because I kept hearing the same thing over and over again: "You need to be good at math to become a programmer." The more I heard it, the more I believed it. Whenever I saw developers building websites, apps, or cool projects, I assumed they were all math experts. 🧮 I imagined them solving complex equations all day while I struggled with basic math concepts. So before I even wrote my first line of code, I had already convinced myself that programming probably wasn't for me. And honestly, I think many beginners feel the same way. 🤔 The Fear Was Bigger Than The Reality When I finally started learning programming, I expected math to be my biggest challenge. It wasn't. My biggest challenge was understanding why things weren't working . I spent hours trying to figure out: Why isn't this button working? 🖱️ Why is this variable undefined? 🤨 Why did this code work yesterday but not today? 😅 Why did fixing one bug create three new bugs? 🐛 Very quickly, I realized that programming wasn't testing my math skills nearly as much as it was testing my patience and problem-solving ability. Most of the time, the challenge wasn't: "Can you solve this equation?" It was: "Can you figure out what's causing this problem?" 🧠 Logic Matters More Than Most People Think One of the biggest lessons I learned is that math and logic are not exactly the same thing. Yes, math uses logic. But you don't need to be a math genius to think logically. Programming is often about breaking a big problem into smaller, manageable pieces. For example: If a user clicks a button, what should happen next? If data is missing, what should the application do? If an error occurs, how should it be handled? That's logic. You're constantly thinking: "If this happens, then what should happen next?" And honestly, that's a huge part of software development. Some of the best developers I've met aren't necessarily the people who can solve the hardest math problems. They're the people who stay calm when everything breaks and patiently work their way to a solution. 🔍 📚 Where Math Actually Helps Now, don't get me wrong. Math is important. There are areas of software development where strong mathematical knowledge is incredibly valuable: 🤖 Machine Learning 📊 Data Science 🎮 Game Physics 🎨 Computer Graphics 🔐 Cryptography In these fields, math is often essential. But that's not the entire software industry. Many developers spend their careers building: 🌐 Websites 📱 Mobile Apps ⚙️ APIs 🏢 Business Software 🔄 Automation Tools And the math they use daily is often much simpler than people imagine. 💡 What Helped Me More Than Math Looking back, the skills that helped me the most were: Curiosity 🔎 Consistency 📅 Patience 😌 Debugging 🐛 Reading documentation 📖 Asking questions 🙋 Learning from mistakes 🎯 Every bug taught me something. Every project made me a little better. Every mistake became a lesson. 🎯 The Biggest Lesson I almost didn't learn programming because I thought I wasn't good enough at math. Today, I realize I was focusing on the wrong thing. The real superpower in programming isn't solving complicated equations. It's being able to think logically, stay curious, and keep going when things don't work the first time. Because let's be honest... 😄 Most developers spend far more time asking: "Why is this not working?" than solving advanced mathematical formulas. If you're interested in programming but worried about your math skills, don't let that fear stop you. Start building. Start experimenting. Start solving small problems. You might discover, just like I did, that logic, persistence, and curiosity matter far more than you expected. But in the end I had to learn math. For a long time, I thought programming wasn't for people like me. Not because I wasn't interested in technology. Not because I didn't enjoy solving problems. But because I kept hearing the same thing over and over again: "You need to be good at math to become a programmer." The more I heard it, the more I believed it. Whenever I saw developers building websites, apps, or cool projects, I assumed they were all math experts. 🧮 I imagined them solving complex equations all day while I struggled with basic math concepts. So before I even wrote my first line of code, I had already convinced myself that programming probably wasn't for me. And honestly, I think many beginners feel the same way. 🤔 The Fear Was Bigger Than The Reality When I finally started learning programming, I expected math to be my biggest challenge. It wasn't. My biggest challenge was understanding why things weren't working . I spent hours trying to figure out: Why isn't this button working? 🖱️ Why is this variable undefined? 🤨 Why did this code work yesterday but not today? 😅 Why did fixing one bug create three new bugs? 🐛 Very quickly, I realized that programming wasn't testing my math skills nearly as much as it was testing my patience and problem-solving ability. Most of the time, the challenge wasn't: "Can you solve this equation?" It was: "Can you figure out what's causing this problem?" 🧠 Logic Matters More Than Most People Think One of the biggest lessons I learned is that math and logic are not exactly the same thing. Yes, math uses logic. But you don't need to be a math genius to think logically. Programming is often about breaking a big problem into smaller, manageable pieces. For example: If a user clicks a button, what should happen next? If data is missing, what should the application do? If an error occurs, how should it be handled? That's logic. You're constantly thinking: "If this happens, then what should happen next?" And honestly, that's a huge part of software development. Some of the best developers I've met aren't necessarily the people who can solve the hardest math problems. They're the people who stay calm when everything breaks and patiently work their way to a solution. 🔍 📚 Where Math Actually Helps Now, don't get me wrong. Math is important. There are areas of software development where strong mathematical knowledge is incredibly valuable: 🤖 Machine Learning 📊 Data Science 🎮 Game Physics 🎨 Computer Graphics 🔐 Cryptography In these fields, math is often essential. But that's not the entire software industry. Many developers spend their careers building: 🌐 Websites 📱 Mobile Apps ⚙️ APIs 🏢 Business Software 🔄 Automation Tools And the math they use daily is often much simpler than people imagine. 💡 What Helped Me More Than Math Looking back, the skills that helped me the most were: Curiosity 🔎 Consistency 📅 Patience 😌 Debugging 🐛 Reading documentation 📖 Asking questions 🙋 Learning from mistakes 🎯 Every bug taught me something. Every project made me a little better. Every mistake became a lesson. 🎯 The Biggest Lesson I almost didn't learn programming because I thought I wasn't good enough at math. Today, I realize I was focusing on the wrong thing. The real superpower in programming isn't solving complicated equations. It's being able to think logically, stay curious, and keep going when things don't work the first time. Because let's be honest... 😄 Most developers spend far more time asking: "Why is this not working?" than solving advanced mathematical formulas. If you're interested in programming but worried about your math skills, don't let that fear stop you. Start building. Start experimenting. Start solving small problems. You might discover, just like I did, that logic, persistence, and curiosity matter far more than you expected. But in the end I had to learn math.