- Unknown
In whatever you choose to do, do it because it’s hard, not because it’s easy. Math and physics and astrophysics are hard. For every hard thing you accomplish, fewer other people are out there doing the same thing as you. That’s what doing something hard means. And in the limit of this, everyone beats a path to your door because you’re the only one around who understands the impossible concept or who solves the unsolvable problem.
Neil deGrasse Tyson (via mathblab)
concentrate on becoming your best self rather than trying to be somebody else
Youtube is not just a popular channel for everyone to broadcast their own images but also a rich source to provide a huge quantity of tutorials beneficial for everyone. Here is a collection of 40 channels that can be equally useful for a beginner and for an adnvanced coder.
For learning anything and everything of programming:
The Newboston
Mycodeschool,
Programming Tutorials,
Computerphile,
LearnCode.academy,
The Net Ninja
UCBerkeley
C++ for beginners, algebra tutorials, algorythms:
Xoaxdotnet
For learning basics and advanced skills in C++:
Bo Qian
For learning Linux terminal basics:
DougRumbaugh
For datastructures and algorithms:
Data Structures and Algorithms. Dr. Naveen Garg, saurabhschool , Paul Programming
Web development: Java, JavaScript, Python, Android, iOS, Swift:
SlideNerd
LearnWebCode
UI/UX design:
Mike Locke
Programming and fun:
Funfunfunction
Other good miscellaneous resources:
ProgrammingKnowledge
Google Developers
Derek Banas
Brad Hussey
O’Reilly
MIT OpenCourseWare
Simple Programmer
Computerphile
CSS-Tricks
Coder’s Guide
Easy Learn Tutorial
Adam Khoury
Programming Tutorials
Patrick WashingtonDC
Coder’s Guide – Neil Rowe
CodeGeek
JREAM
LevelUpTuts
Treehouse
Codecourse (formerly PHPacademy)
Programming tutorial
Easydevtuts
Add your favorite Youtube channels in the comments!
Source - https://hownot2code.com/2016/11/18/40-youtube-channels-for-programmers/
envision yourself exactly where you want to be. what motivates you? picture that, and never let it go. keep it in your mind and heart as you construct a plan to achieve what you want. with discipline and some confidence, you will reach your goal. you will.
all these studying tips saying ‘stay away from your computer’ and ‘use these apps to control the sites you can access’ and I just keep thinking
i’m a computer science major
I have to use programs to write code
I have to check websites
how exactly am I supposed to do that and still get work done
Consider going into a classroom and looking around, and you’re the only man there. Even if you’re totally ok with that (heck, you expected it), you notice. You feel all the women in the room notice you and see that a lot of them are glancing over at you or making comments about your presence. Ok, you knew that might happen. A woman next to you says, “Hey, cool, a guy in a CS class, good for you.” When it comes time to form a study group, half the women in the class don’t want to work with you because they assume men aren’t as good at CS. The other half jockey to work with you, some for the novelty (“Hey, I’m in a group with the guy, ”) and half because they want to ask you out. When you go to apply for an internship, a lot of companies seem really interested in you, but you’re not sure if it’s because they like your resume or just because you’re a guy in CS and they want to look open and forward thinking by having lots of male interns coding. You meet up with a group of female interns and one makes a slightly sexual joke. Everyone freezes and looks at you - are you one of those guys in CS that is serious and can’t take a joke, or will you be one of the girls? At your job after you graduate, it’s naturally not ok for a woman to say outright that she’s prejudiced against male coders… But maybe your boss gives you slightly different work, or it takes longer for you to get a promotion because they need more proof that you are good - you don’t get the benefit of the doubt the way the girls do. When you express a strong opinion about a tough problem, the women write it off as you being sensitive and emotional - men often are, you know. When discussing your career ambitions, your coworkers often ask you how children play into that - I mean, you’re probably looking for a wife and plan to have kids since you’re in your late 20s. Everyone knows it’s a safe bet that kids are going to derail your career at least temporarily, if not permanently. You frequently police how often you mention family at all for fear people will assume you’re expecting a kid soon… … Does this begin to explain it, at all? Even when a company is open to women working in all areas and no one is a dick, there is still a lot of pervasive bias that affects how women are treated and perceived. Why would you notice? It doesn’t affect you.
Electrostaticrain (Reddit)
by Nathan W. Pyle
Full-time Computer Science student, reader, and gamer with a comics addiction.
121 posts