There was once a warning and disclaimer by a manufacture of children's
superhero's costumes that read:
"WARNING: This costume will not allow you to fly."
A bit over the top I think but the manufacture obviously felt it necessary to
point out, just in case.
But it does highlight a significant point, it warns you that you are not
something that you may think you are.
Wordpress
I have used and played around with Wordpress for a few years now, building a
few sites for fun and a few for my business, one being
Numbers for Nerds.
I usually start by setting up the domain on my hosting and then installing the
latest version of Wordpress, and then it appears just like magic with the
standard theme ready to go.
I look for a theme in the Wordpress theme directory and often search google for
paid themes to see what other and better themes I like. However, once I have a
theme, I am never 100% happy with the theme itself, and I set to making it look
different.
Most themes have a 'customisation' option, whereby you can change the
colours, fonts and sometimes the layout all with the click of a button. Soon it
starts to look customised to how I want it. I can upload images and insert my
content into the placeholder sections and it starts to look really good, well in
my opinion anyway.
I feel that I can accomplish building a website with Wordpress but here comes
the warning of reality
I am not a Web Developer - I am a Wordpress user!
Similar to the cape, being able to use Wordpress doesn't actually make me a
web developer. I can simply use a piece of software that prompts me to make
edits and guides me through the options available, which results in a website.
The theme itself has been actually built by the real developer.
This is another reason why I wanted to learn to code and further my knowledge
of web development.
You see, there is lots of magic going on in the background that I clearly
didn't understand how or why or what it was doing. I always wanted to tinker
with the theme more and more. I started to use custom css, adding more and more
plugins and over all feeling disgruntled the theme didn't do and look exactly
how I wanted it to - until I finally thought, why not just learn to build a
basic website from scratch!
Accountant or User?
The same principle could be said witin the accounting profession.
With many software applications offering certifications and rewards on
learning to use their software it raises the same question:
"Are you an Accountant/Bookkeeper or are you simply a User?"
You really need to know the fundamentals behind the software to actually
understand how, what and why it is doing what it does, meaning you need to think
for yourself like a Web Developer or Accountant / Bookkeeper and without
experience it will be hard to achieve this.
Thanks for reading,
Chris -
Counter2Coder