Organic chemists tend to just use the "relative" descriptors of alkane, alcohol, ketone, acid, and CO2 to describe oxidation states of carbon. You can tell which one you have by just imagining adding water to whatever you have and see which kind of compound you would end up with.
The numerical representation is more like the inorganic chemists way of thinking about oxidation states, and that is what you would encounter if you were doing organometallic chemistry or something.