CS50 is an excellent choice for learning C and programming in general. Fast paced enough for someone with mid-level experience to feel comfortable pretty quickly, and thorough enough to be useful long term. Take a look at www.cs50.tv. 8.
Yeah, CS50 is a good choice. Cloud9 online IDE if you don't have one at hand. Although you don't want books suggested I dare to say that the book 'C Primer Plus' is a good read and reference to gain a solid fundament and understanding. 5. level 1.
Two years ago, I didn’t have much to brag about. I had spent six years in undergrad bouncing around between humanities majors before settling on international relations. I know you’re probably saying international relations is useless. I knew that, but I was also struggling with crippling depression and anxiety.
In this video series, Bryan Cairns covers Python Programming from scratch for beginners without any programming or python knowledge.
Been talking to a friend who studies computer science at Harvard university. He is the best programmer I know, faster than most seniors at my work in terms of coding challenges.
I've started trying to learn how to code, and while I'm doing pretty well understanding the concepts, I find myself regularly checking back on previous projects to see how to do things.
Just wanted to remind those who have been practicing and trying I'll tell you stick with it and you'll eventually get a job. I know it's hard and disheartening and will make you want to give up and work at the local fast food place. It took 2 long hard years on my mental health and it also hurt my pride a bit.
I think I'm too dumb for programming. This might be a stupid question, but how do you know if programming is not for you? I mean, one time we were tasked to create a project which is calculates the length of a call, it's gross cost, net cost, and tax. There were many more instructions but it was a very beginner program. It was to be written in C.
Hi guys, I'm recently on the job hunt and was just curios what questions do you ask your potential employer to determine if the company is the right fit for you? I found a lot of general questions in Google but I was curious specifically for software or web development industries.
Playlist on how to build a website from scratch in just HTML and CSS - Job shadow me as I build a real clients website and explain everything I do and why. No frameworks. This YouTube playlist is perfect for beginners who want to see what it's like to work as a developer and learn by doing.
I work in reporting for a global company. One of my tasks is to to manually download approx. 150-200 files (depends on the week) from a tool we use in order to update weekly reports. This must be done on Monday Mornings and it was very boring and dull.
My wife is currently learning programming from scratch and I’m just extremely proud of her for stepping out of her comfort zone. To learn a new skill like this is no easy feat and i commend all of you for giving it a try. I can tell she’s frustrated at times but she’s slowly getting it even if it’s hard.
I just solved this question, and no matter what I did, it always went over time. I got the time complexity down to O (n) in the worst case, and still the execution took 5x the allotted time. Got mad at the problem and just solved it using math, and it got accepted instantly. I understand that python isn't the fastest languages out there, but still.
I started programming about 1-2 weeks ago. Im currently learning C# and Unity. Whenever I face a problem I try to solve it for about 5 minutes and 99% of the time I have to google it. Is that bad because I won't really learn programming that way or something?.
It's really hard sometimes when you have ADHD and get focused. If it takes a normal person 10 minutes to get settled it might take you 20. That's OK.
As a follow-up to the free full stack mini-course, How to Plan and Build a Project - Building It, I created a free Java Crash Course on YouTube with supporting written instruction so you can program along with the videos.