Friday, January 23, 2026

TIPS FOR PROGRAMMING




 Essential Things You Need to Have If You Want to Learn Programming


Learning programming is an exciting journey that can open many doors in technology, business, and innovation. However, many beginners think that to become a programmer, they must be very intelligent, good at mathematics, or own expensive computers. The truth is different. While programming does require effort and dedication, the most important requirements are not complicated. Below are the essential things every person who wants to learn programming should have.


1. Strong Interest and Curiosity


The first and most important thing you need is interest. Programming involves solving problems and learning new concepts continuously. If you are curious about how websites work, how mobile applications are built, or how systems operate behind the scenes, then you already have a good foundation.


Curiosity pushes you to ask questions like:


- “Why is my code not working?”

- “How can I make this program faster or better?”

- “What happens if I change this part of the code?”


Without interest, programming can feel difficult and boring. With interest, it becomes enjoyable and motivating.


2. Patience and Persistence


Programming is not learned in one day. You will make mistakes, encounter errors, and sometimes feel stuck. This is a normal part of the learning process. A good programmer is not someone who never makes mistakes, but someone who does not give up easily.


You must be patient enough to:


- Debug errors

- Read documentation

- Try different solutions


Persistence is what separates successful programmers from those who quit early.


3. Willingness to Practice Regularly


Programming is a practical skill. Reading books or watching tutorials alone is not enough. You need to practice regularly by writing code yourself. The more you practice, the more comfortable you become with programming concepts.


Even practicing for:


- 30 minutes a day

- or a few hours a week


can make a big difference over time. Consistency is more important than speed.


4. Basic Problem-Solving Skills


Programming is mainly about solving problems. Before writing code, you must understand the problem and think about how to solve it step by step. You do not need advanced mathematics, but you should be willing to think logically.


For example:


- Break a big problem into smaller parts

- Think about possible solutions

- Choose the best approach


These skills improve naturally as you continue learning programming.


5. A Computer and Internet Access


To learn programming, you need a computer (laptop or desktop). It does not have to be expensive or high-end. Many programming languages like Python can run on basic computers.


Internet access is also important because it allows you to:


- Watch tutorials

- Read documentation

- Ask questions on forums

- Download tools and software


With a computer and internet connection, you have access to unlimited learning resources.


6. Basic Understanding of English


Most programming languages, tools, and documentation are written in English. You do not need perfect English, but a basic understanding helps a lot. Knowing common words like “if,” “else,” “function,” and “error” will make learning easier.


Improving your English while learning programming is an added advantage.


7. A Learning Mindset


Technology changes very fast. A good programmer understands that learning never stops. You should be open to:

- Learning new languages

- Updating your skills

- Accepting feedback and corrections

->A learning mindset helps you grow and adapt in the tech world.

Conclusion

To learn programming, you do not need to be a genius or have special talent. What you truly need is interest, patience, practice, and the willingness to learn. With these qualities, anyone can become a programmer.

Programming is a journey, not a destination. If you prepare yourself with the right mindset and tools, you will find the journey rewarding and full of opportunities. Start today, stay consistent, and believe in your ability to learn.

NB: This article is designed for beginners who are planning to start their programming journey.

What Is Programming and Why Is It Important in Today’s World?

In today’s modern digital world, the term programming has become very common. Almost everything we use daily is powered by programming, from smartphones and websites to banking systems, traffic lights, and even smart home devices. Despite this, many people still wonder what programming really is and why it is considered such an important skill in the 21st century.


Definition of Programming

Programming is the process of writing instructions (code) that tell a computer or electronic system what to do. These instructions are written using special languages known as programming languages. The computer follows these instructions step by step to perform a specific task.


In simple terms, programming is the way humans communicate with machines and give them commands such as:


«“Store this data,”
“Display this information,” or
“Repeat this action until a condition is met.”»


Without programming, computers would be useless pieces of hardware.


Programming Languages


There are many programming languages in the world, each designed for specific purposes. Some of the most popular programming languages include:


PYTHON – Known for its simplicity and readability. It is widely used in data science, artificial intelligence, automation, and web development.


JAVASCRIPT– Commonly used to build interactive websites and web applications.


JAVA– Popular for Android app development and large enterprise systems.


C and C++ – Used in system programming, embedded systems, and hardware-related applications.


No single language is “the best.” Each programming language has its own strengths and areas of application.


Why Is Programming Important?



Programming is important for several reasons.

First, the world is rapidly moving toward digital transformation. Businesses, schools, hospitals, and governments rely heavily on software systems. Programming makes it possible to create and maintain these systems.


Second, programming offers many career and business opportunities. Programmers can work in offices, freelance online, work remotely for international companies, or start their own tech-based businesses. This makes programming one of the most flexible and in-demand skills today.


Third, programming helps develop problem-solving and logical thinking skills. A programmer learns how to break down complex problems into smaller parts and solve them step by step. These skills are useful not only in technology but also in everyday life.


Who Can Learn Programming?


Many people believe that programming is only for geniuses or people who studied advanced mathematics. This is a myth. Anyone can learn programming, regardless of age, background, or profession.

Whether you are a student, entrepreneur, or employee, programming can add great value to your skills. What matters most is:


- Interest and curiosity
- Patience and consistency
- Willingness to practice regularly

Nobody is born knowing how to write code. Every programmer starts as a beginner.

Where Should Beginners Start?


For beginners, it is highly recommended to start with a simple and beginner-friendly language such as Python. Python has an easy-to-read syntax and is widely used in many fields.

Beginners should focus on learning the basic concepts of programming, including:

- Variables
- Conditional statements (if, else)
- Loops
- Functions

Once these fundamentals are understood, learning other programming languages becomes much easier.

Conclusion

Programming is no longer an optional skill; it is a core skill for the digital age. As technology continues to grow, the demand for people who understand programming will also increase. Learning programming opens doors to innovation, creativity, and financial opportunities.

If you start learning programming today, even at a slow pace, you will be investing in a skill that can shape your future. Stay connected to this blog for more articles, tutorials, and tips about programming and modern technology.

NB: This article is written for beginners and technology enthusiasts who want to understand the importance of programming.

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Join our African social network project get paid per task

 We are launching our own African social network that will be paying all users who create an accounts and be active using the social network

This is African social network that is owned by Africans.

We Africans are good users of social media but we don't own social media this has big side effects to our African economy and country wise security 

Our African social network will speed up the African economy by creating jobs to fellow Africans 



This African social network project will reduce or stop Africans sending money to USA when using services from  western social media like Facebook x Instagram and LinkedIn 


We want Africans to advertise their business on African social network so the money that is earned from Africa can remain to be spent by Africans.

Every person who will create an account on African social network will get paid per task 

When he invite a friend to create an account he will get paid $1 and he will also earn when he is interacting on the social network like comment like or post new discussion

Now if you want to be part of this project join our WhatsApp group for more information 

https://chat.whatsapp.com/E6rNBjgbcwNINcZYYFC63R

People from all African countries are invited to join this African social network project so they can help to spread it on their countries and become country managers who will be getting full monthly salary and be supported to initiate branch offices in their countries








Monday, January 5, 2026

The best African tale 2026 read here


Faith to remain in your heart and in all the days of your life, the smile I have on you is the only way that can allow my happiness to accompany you all the days of your life.

 


But also remember that a smile is the most beautiful language in the world, it not only brings good feelings to yourself, but it can also infect the people around you with a good smile, happiness and peace.


I wish I could greet you every day with a smile that makes you happy every day of your life but the wall without even a speck of space to see you has become the main obstacle in my eyes against you.


I never thought that jokes have obstacles but in the good beginning of our friendship my jokes to you have turned into hostility, I am grateful for the decisions you saw as good for you but remember such difficult decisions you decided to take against me you would decide to leave them to those who are like them, you are a good child who is very fond of good words but it is better to leave bad words to those who are interested in them but not you because you are not at all like those things.


I pray I wish you well in your daily work and in the days of my life the word lover will not be able to come out of my mouth, I will call you that anywhere and all the days of my life because I loved you very much my love, but the decisions of not wanting to even see your face and even my phone lest you allow your heart to make it to anyone you meet romantically against your life let it end only with me, because such a statement will one day hurt you more than it hurt me.


I love you so much my Sarah your name in my soul will never be forgotten in my life.


Jaden got up to return home, eager to meet Mr Tabasam, who he believed could be a good teacher for him in life.

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Are you interested to get a black African man for serious relationship read here

 This article guides you how to get a black African man for serious relation. And if you are a white man searching for serious relationship with a black African girl this article is also useful for you.

Love don't select colours or ethnicity, it can emerge and grow. In 2026 you can start your international dating and succeed to get a black African girl  or black African man 



Characteristics of African girls 

They have serious love relationship

Long term relationship

They are polite 

They care well to the husband

Always they need to be treated like a kid 

They fill prestigious to get married my a white man 

They are poor so they depend on a man to get all basic needs 

They dream to live abroad like USA UK china japan


Characteristics of African men

They are strong on bed

They fill prestigious to Mary a white woman 

They dream to live abroad like USA UK china japan

They are poor they will depend on white woman to be financed for extra human needs 


Friday, December 19, 2025

Sometimes there is no reason God loves Africa


“If the bad things that happen to us are the results of bad luck, and not the will of God,” a woman asked me one evening after I had delivered a lecture on my theology, “what makes bad luck happen?” I was stumped for an answer. My instinctive response was that nothing makes bad luck



This is perhaps the philosophical idea which is the key to everything else I am suggesting in this book. Can you accept the idea that some things happen for no reason, that there is randomness in the universe? Some people cannot handle that idea. They look for connections, striving desperately to make sense of all that happens. They convince themselves that God is cruel, or that they are sinners, rather than accept randomness. Sometimes, when they have made sense of ninety percent of everything they know, they let themselves assume that the other ten percent makes sense also, but lies beyond the reach of their understanding. But why do we have to insist on everything being reasonable? Why must everything happen for a specific reason? Why can’t we let the universe have a few rough edges?

I can more or less understand why a man’s mind might suddenly snap, so that he grabs a shotgun and runs out into the street, shooting at strangers. Perhaps he is an army veteran, haunted by memories of things he has seen and done in combat. Perhaps he has encountered more frustration and rejection than he can bear at home and at work. He has been treated like a “nonperson,” someone who does not have to be taken seriously, until his rage boils over and he decides, “I’ll show them that I matter after all.”

To grab a gun and shoot at innocent people is irrational, unreasonable behavior, but I can understand it. What I cannot understand is why Mrs. Smith should be walking on that street at that moment, while Mrs. Brown chooses to step into a shop on a whim and saves her life. Why should Mr. Jones happen to be crossing the street, presenting a perfect target to the mad marksman, while Mr. Green, who never has more than one cup of coffee for breakfast, chooses to linger over a second cup that morning and is still indoors when the shooting starts? The lives of dozens of people will be affected by such trivial, unplanned decisions.

I understand that hot, dry weather, weeks without rain, increases the danger of forest fire, so that a spark, a match, or sunlight focused on a shard of glass, can set a forest ablaze. I understand that the course of that fire will be determined by, among other things, the direction in which the wind blows. But is there a sensible explanation for why wind and weather combine to direct a forest fire on a given day toward certain homes rather than others, trapping some people inside and sparing others? Or is it just a matter of pure luck?

When a man and a woman join in making love, the man’s ejaculate swarms with tens of millions of sperm cells, each one carrying a slightly different set of biologically inherited characteristics. No moral intelligence decides which one of those teeming millions will fertilize a waiting egg. Some of the sperm cells will cause a child to be born with a physical handicap, perhaps a fatal malady. Others will give him not only good health, but superior athletic or musical ability, or creative intelligence. A child’s life will be wholly shaped, the lives of parents and relatives will be deeply affected, by the random determination of that race.

Sometimes many more lives may be affected. Robert and Suzanne Massie, parents of a boy with hemophilia, did what most parents of afflicted children do. They read everything they could about their son’s ailment. They learned that the only son of the last czar of Russia was a hemophiliac, and in Robert’s book Nicholas and Alexandra, he speculated on whether the child’s illness, the result of the random mating of the “wrong” sperm with the “wrong” egg, might have distracted and upset the royal parents and affected their ability to govern, bringing on the Bolshevik Revolution. He suggested that Europe’s most populous nation may have changed its form of government, affecting the lives of everyone in the twentieth century, because of that random genetic occurrence.

Some people will find the hand of God behind everything that happens. I visit a woman in the hospital whose car was run into by a drunken driver running a red light. Her vehicle was totally demolished, but miraculously she escaped with only two cracked ribs and a few superficial cuts from flying glass. She looks up at me from her hospital bed and says, “Now I know there is a God. If I could come out of that alive and in one piece, it must be because He is looking out for me up there.” I smile and keep quiet, running the risk of letting her think that I agree with her (what rabbi would be opposed to belief in God?), because it is not the time or place for a theology seminar. But my mind goes back to a funeral I conducted two weeks earlier, for a young husband and father who died in a

similar drunk-driver collision; and I remember another case, a child killed by a hit-and-run driver while roller-skating; and all the newspaper accounts of lives cut short in automobile accidents. The woman before me may believe that she is alive because God wanted her to survive, and I am not inclined to talk her out of it, but what would she or I say to those other families? That they were less worthy than she, less valuable in God’s sight? That God wanted them to die at that particular time and manner, and did not choose to spare them?

Remember our discussion in chapter 1 of Thornton Wilder’s Bridge of San Luis Rey? When five people fall to their deaths, Brother Juniper investigates and learns that each of the five had recently “put things together” in his life. He is tempted to conclude that the rope bridge’s breaking was not an accident, but an aspect of God’s providence. There are no accidents. But when laws of physics and metal fatigue cause a wing to fall off an airplane, or when human carelessness causes engine failure, so that a plane crashes, killing two hundred people, was it God’s will that those two hundred should chance to be on a doomed plane that day? And if the two hundred and first passenger had a flat tire on the way to the airport and missed the flight, grumbling and cursing his luck as he saw the plane take off without him, was it God’s will that he should live while the others died? If it were, I would have to wonder about what kind of message God was sending us with His apparently arbitrary acts of condemning and saving.

When Martin Luther King, Jr., was killed in April 1968, much was made of the fact that he had passed his peak as a black leader. Many alluded to the speech he gave the night before his death, in which he said that, like Moses, he had “been to the mountaintop and seen the Promised Land,” implying that, like Moses, he would die before he reached it. Rather than accept his death as a senseless tragedy, many, like Wilder’s Brother Juniper, saw evidence that God took Martin Luther King at just the right moment, to spare him the agony of living out his years as a “has-been,” a rejected prophet. I could never accept that line of reasoning. I would like to think that God is concerned, not only with the ego of one black leader, but with the needs of tens of millions of black men, women, and children. It would be hard to explain in what way they were better off for Dr. King’s having been murdered. Why can’t we acknowledge that the assassination was an affront to God, even as it was to us, and a sidetracking of His purposes, rather than strain our imaginations to find evidence of God’s fingerprints on the

murder weapon?

Soldiers in combat fire their weapons at an anonymous, faceless enemy. They know that they cannot let themselves be distracted by thinking that the soldier on the other side may be a nice, decent person with a loving family and a promising career waiting at home. Soldiers understand that a speeding bullet has no conscience, that a falling mortar shell cannot discriminate between those whose death would be a tragedy and those who would never be missed. That is why soldiers develop a certain fatalism about their chances, speaking of the bullet with their name on it, of their number coming up, rather than calculating whether they deserve to die or not. That is why the Army will not send the sole surviving son of a bereaved family into combat, because the Army understands that it cannot rely on God to make things come out fairly, even as the Bible long ago ordered home from the army every man who had just betrothed a wife or built a new home, lest he die in battle and never come to enjoy them. The ancient Israelites, for all their profound faith in God, knew that they could not depend on God to impose a morally acceptable pattern on where the arrows landed.

Let us ask again: Is there always a reason, or do some things just happen at random, for no cause?

“In the beginning,” the Bible tells us, “God created the heaven and the earth. The earth was formless and chaotic, with darkness covering everything.” Then God began to work His creative magic on the chaos, sorting things out, imposing order where there had been randomness before. He separated the light from the darkness, the earth from the sky, the dry land from the sea. This is what it means to create: not to make something out of nothing, but to make order out of chaos. A creative scientist or historian does not make up facts but orders facts; he sees connections between them rather than seeing them as random data. A creative writer does not make up new words but arranges familiar words in patterns which say something fresh to us.

So it was with God, fashioning a world whose overriding principle was orderliness, predictability, in place of the chaos with which He started: regular sunrises and sunsets, regular tides, plants and animals that bore seeds inside them so that they could reproduce themselves, each after its own kind. By the end of the sixth day, God had finished the world He had set out to make, and on the seventh day He rested.


But suppose God didn’t quite finish by closing time on the afternoon of the sixth day? We know today that the world took billions of years to take shape, not six days. The Creation story in Genesis is a very important one and has much to say to us, but its six-day time frame is not meant to be taken literally. Suppose that Creation, the process of replacing chaos with order, were still going on. What would that mean? In the biblical metaphor of the six days of Creation, we would find ourselves somewhere in the middle of Friday afternoon. Man was just created a few “hours” ago. The world is mostly an orderly, predictable place, showing ample evidence of God’s thoroughness and handiwork, but pockets of chaos remain. Most of the time, the events of the universe follow firm natural laws. But every now and then, things happen not contrary to those laws of nature but outside them. Things happen which could just as easily have happened differently.

Even as I write this, the newscasts carry reports of a massive hurricane in the Caribbean. Meteorologists are at a loss to predict whether it will spin out to sea or crash into populated areas of the Texas-Louisiana coastline. The biblical mind saw the earthquake that overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah as God’s way of punishing the people of those cities for their depravities. Some medieval and Victorian thinkers saw the eruption of Vesuvius and the destruction of Pompeii as a way of putting an end to that society’s immorality. Even today, the earthquakes in California are interpreted by some as God’s way of expressing His displeasure with the alleged homosexual excesses of San Francisco or the heterosexual ones of Los Angeles. But most of us today see a hurricane, an earthquake, a volcano as having no conscience. I would not venture to predict the path of a hurricane on the basis of which communities deserve to be lashed and which ones to be spared.

A change of wind direction or the shifting of a tectonic plate can cause a hurricane or earthquake to move toward a populated area instead of out into an uninhabited stretch of land. Why? A random shift in weather patterns causes too much or too little rain over a farming area, and a year’s harvest is destroyed. A drunken driver steers his car over the center line of the highway and collides with the green Chevrolet instead of the red Ford fifty feet farther away. An engine bolt breaks on flight 205 instead of on flight 209, inflicting tragedy on one random group of families rather than another. There is no message in all of that. There is no reason for those particular people to be afflicted rather than

others. These events do not reflect God’s choices. They happen at random, and randomness is another name for chaos, in those corners of the universe where God’s creative light has not yet penetrated. And chaos is evil; not wrong, not malevolent, but evil nonetheless, because by causing tragedies at random, it prevents people from believing in God’s goodness.

I once asked a friend of mine, an accomplished physicist, whether from a scientific perspective the world was becoming a more orderly place, whether randomness was increasing or decreasing with time. He replied by citing the second law of thermodynamics, the law of entropy: Every system left to itself will change in such a way as to approach equilibrium. He explained that this meant the world was changing in the direction of more randomness. Think of a group of marbles in a jar, carefully arranged by size and color. The more you shake the jar, the more that neat arrangement will give way to random distribution, until it will be only a coincidence to find one marble next to another of the same color. This, he said, is what is happening to the world. One hurricane might veer off to sea, sparing the coastal cities, but it would be a mistake to see any evidence of pattern or purpose to that. Over the course of time, some hurricanes will blow harmlessly out to sea, while others will head into populated areas and cause devastation. The longer you keep track of such things, the less of a pattern you will find.

I told him that I had been hoping for a different answer. I had hoped for a scientific equivalent of the first chapter of the Bible, telling me that with every passing “day” the realm of chaos was diminishing, and more of the universe was yielding to the rule of order. He told me that if it made me feel any better, Albert Einstein had the same problem. Einstein was uncomfortable with quantum physics and tried for years to disprove it, because it based itself on the hypothesis of things happening at random. Einstein preferred to believe that “God does not play dice with the cosmos.”

It may be that Einstein and the Book of Genesis are right. A system left to itself may evolve in the direction of randomness. On the other hand, our world may not be a system left to itself. There may in fact be a creative impulse acting on it, the Spirit of God hovering over the dark waters, operating over the course of millennia to bring order out of the chaos. It may yet come to pass that, as “Friday afternoon” of the world’s evolution ticks toward the Great Sabbath which is the End of Days, the impact of random evil will be diminished.

Or it may be that God finished His work of creating eons ago, and left the rest to us. Residual chaos, chance and mischance, things happening for no reason, will continue to be with us, the kind of evil that Milton Steinberg has called “the still unremoved scaffolding of the edifice of God’s creativity.” In that case, we will simply have to learn to live with it, sustained and comforted by the knowledge that the earthquake and the accident, like the murder and the robbery, are not the will of God, but represent that aspect of reality which stands independent of His will, and which angers and saddens God even as it angers and saddens us

Thursday, December 18, 2025

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"What is the African beauty standard for females?"


The main beauty of an African woman is her softheartedness towards everyone, her compassion, zeal,love, strength,intelligence,passion, her confidence, her self worth, discipline, she's optimistic, perseverance,her responsibilities, integrity,her scars, past,future and her courage. If you are a white man try to get an African woman you will enjoy alot