11 minutes ago, Fulcrum.013 said:
Really it possible here to study complete at home, then come to university, pass all required exams and got a diploma.
You're too fixated on getting the piece of paper -- that's not what I was talking about in the section of text you quoted and responding to. I'm talking about people studying at home with no intention of getting a qualification. Whilst not everyone chooses to do so, that's something that's becoming increasingly easy to do and which a lot of people do choose to do.
Yes, there are benefits to formal education, but talking specifically about one of those benefits -- exposure to topics you may not otherwise be familiar with -- it is entirely possible to gain that benefit without ever getting a degree. A growing number of degree level courses have made their learning materials freely available online, making this easier than it has ever been.
I'm not saying properly qualified developers aren't often more capable than those without formal training, or that there aren't often problems with the code written by those developers -- hell, a lot of formally trained and qualified developers also produce terrible code -- but I am saying that isn't necessarily important to the question at hand.
Let me separate this from the rest of the text and make it bold so that it stands out for you.
Your opinion of formal education and qualifications is just an opinion and doesn't necessarily relate to the original poster's employability. All the examples and arguments in the world will not change that. Continuing to give more examples, therefore, isn't really taking the conversation in a useful direction.