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Some call it a challenge. Others call it a community. Whatever you call it, 100 Days Of Code is a bunch of fun and a great learning experience that helps developers build strong coding habits, and there is a community of people doing it with you and supporting you through social accountability.
The 100 Days of Code challenge boils down to two general rules:
If you’re a developer interested in event streaming and would like to use the 100 Days Of Code model as a way to learn about Apache Kafka®, the 100 Days Of Code page on Confluent Developer provides a curated list of resources to give you some inspiration. The content spans:
Perhaps you’re motivated to join 100 Days Of Code because there is a specific set of hot new technologies you want to tinker with. Think about what that set of tech looks like and how the pieces relate to each other. Or you might be driven to join the challenge because you have a specific project in mind, like building a real-time app that checks for hard-to-get products in an online store (hey there, global supply chain!), creating an adventure game that streams game events, evaluating network usage on your home Wi-Fi, etc. Think about what tech stack you need to learn to accomplish your project. Knowing what your goals are will help you create a good plan.
Once you’ve figured out your goal, the original 100 Days Of Code website suggests that you publicly commit to the challenge to hold yourself accountable. If you decide to commit to the 100 Days Of Code challenge for Apache Kafka, tweet your commitment to the world, making yourself accountable to the community.
You should be able to cover a lot of ground in 100 days, even at just one hour per day. You don’t need to plan out each and every day ahead of time—in fact, some people recommend that you do not do this because it’s too rigid, whereas 100 Days Of Code should be a creative journey. But you should still identify a set of resources to aid your learning effort.
If your goal is to become more proficient with Kafka, visit Confluent Developer to build your own self-directed learning journey. Kafka may be your entire focus for the 100 days of learning, but more likely than not, you also want to become more proficient in the broader ecosystem. So make sure to incorporate other resources within the tech stack, to complement your Kafka learning: microservices, or serverless, or event sourcing, or programming languages like Python, Go, or .NET, or analytics, or web development, or databases, SQL or GraphQL….
Additionally, create a project space, both literally and online. Literally: Think about where you are physically going to sit and code, especially if you are doing this outside of work hours. Online: Figure out what your online platform looks like. In this day and age, you can find plenty of cloud environments that you can use as a sandbox for learning. For example, in Confluent Cloud, you can create separate environments or Kafka clusters for different projects you’re working on, and then tear them down when you’re done. Go set up a cool space in Confluent Cloud for your learning—and get $100 of free usage with the promo code 100DAYSKAFKA!
Pick a super easy task for Day 1. Nothing is more of a buzzkill than choosing something defeatingly difficult for the first day. For Kafka, get going with the short and easy quick start (as a bonus, the quick start will help you set up your cloud sandbox for working with Kafka throughout the rest of the challenge).
Throughout the 100 days, try to work on the challenge daily, but don’t worry if you miss a day. Take a day off when you need it, but any more than one consecutive missed day, and you could start to lose the habit you’re working to form.
While good, lasting habits are hard to build, it helps to have some kind of support from others. This is where the community aspect of the challenge comes into play. Join the Confluent community, ask all your Kafka-related questions, find answers, and encourage others. Keep the community updated on your daily progress and share links to or screenshots of any applications you write. For information about other ways to connect with the 100 Days Of Code community, see the Connect page on the official challenge website.
For us in the Confluent DevRel team, we are especially excited to see what you build with Kafka, so please tweet to us @confluentinc or post in the Community Forum and let us know how it goes. Good luck!
We are proud to announce the release of Apache Kafka 3.9.0. This is a major release, the final one in the 3.x line. This will also be the final major release to feature the deprecated Apache ZooKeeper® mode. Starting in 4.0 and later, Kafka will always run without ZooKeeper.
In this third installment of a blog series examining Kafka Producer and Consumer Internals, we switch our attention to Kafka consumer clients, examining how consumers interact with brokers, coordinate their partitions, and send requests to read data from Kafka topics.