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Fox way drinks more goddamn tea than any americans i've ever met
YAY i finally got a job !!!
Hi I'm indy I'm a new follower I plan on going in to computer science! Any advice ?
Hi there! Ohhh thatâs so awesome, good luck! Computer science is an amazing subject to study! I was terrified at first because I havenât had much experience in coding before going to uni, but youâre going to be just FINE trust me! â¨
đť Â first of all DONâT BE SCARED YOU CANâT CODE - thatâs why youâre going to computer science in the first place, to learn to code. Of course, thereâs going to be people who are pro-coders already, but donât get intimidated by them, find your own pace and just do your thing! Theyâre probably repeating the year anyway or they transferred.
đť  I know in computer science youâre mostly like âwhy do I need lectures when I need to CODE not listen about codingâ, but trust me GO TO LECTURES - I attended (almost) every lecture possible during my first year and it really made a World of a difference especially if youâre a newbie to all of this! Youâll meet the professors and youâll know what theyâre expecting of you and theyâll probably tell you some funny stories as well. Plus youâll have more familiar faces on the campus :)Â
đť  DO SOME READING - thereâs one lecture that I didnât go to and that was a mistake I tell you. I didnât go because the lecturer's voice was boring and I was literally falling asleep. But after I did some reading about the subject before the exam I realized his words were very valuable, but unfortunately if you already knew a bit about the subject, so if you have a subject that bores you - do some reading on your own and then go to the lecture. youâll get much more information out of it!Â
đť  CODE AT HOME - after youâve practiced some skills during the classes, go home and practice them again on your own. Try doing something useful or fun with it. Like make it print out âYoloâ in a circle (I did that, no regrets lmao)
đť Â INSTALL ALL THE SOFTWARE DURING YOUR FIRST WEEK - install all the things youâre going to need during the year on your first week, honestly, please do! Itâll save you time later on. As soon as the professor mentions what you should install, note it down, go home, install it.Â
đť  PRACTICE EVEN REALLY SIMPLE THINGS - if you donât understand anything just type it on youtube and youâll find plenty of the video tutorials which ARE AMAZING. They helped me a lot with understanding some stuff I couldnât get a grip of. And I know youâll find some stuff that youâre like âI donât need to practice this, this is trivialâ ITâS NOT and youâll get it wrong if you donât code it at least once, just do it, itâll take like 30s.Â
đť  here are some links which really helped me out and I would recommend checking out beforehand: * c++ step by step video tutorials with Bucky (Bucky saved me before the exam)* learn c++ in one video ( doesnât really teach you c++ in one video, but thereâs some useful stuff especially if youâre new to this) * sorting algorithms with hungarian folk dance (lmao these are really useful, I promise) * codeacademy (hereâs just basic coding, but good to start with :) )*  introduction to 3D graphics with Blender ( THE GOD OF BLENDER) and finally:* incredibly realistic wolf animationÂ
HAVE FUN, RELAX AND GOOD LUCK! â¨â¨â¨â¨ Hope this helped!Â
July 26, 2017
August is right around the corner so I decided to write out my goals for this upcoming semester

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Hi, do you know any resources to start learning coding, preferably for free? Ty!!
Hiya! ⨠Yeah, Iâll see what I can find! However! Online courses often have a build in a code editor. Donât. Honestly, do not. Get a full software and install it, donât be restricted to just an online code editor, even on a basic level. First of all decide what language you want to start learning. For complete beginners, Iâd recommend Python or C.Â
𥠠codeacademy (this Iâve tried myself and yep, itâs really well written and good for beginners; it doesnât have many courses tho) đĄ programmr.com đĄ codeavengersđĄ code.orgđĄ Buckyâs wonderful tutorials (these are amazing! Iâve only done the c++ ones, but they were really well explained and included stuff like installing a software as well!)
And now here are some âtoolsâ to use while programming:Â
đ stackoverflow - biggest platform there is; you can ask them anything, but itâs probably been asked before so try looking on it at firstđ cppreference.com - has all the information about c++ built in libraries, functions, variables and anything youâll possibly need đ python visualizer - helps you visualize code if you donât have a compiler on your laptop - they also have other languagesđ learnpython đ python tutorialđ game development with pygame - do something FUN! Itâs not that hard, just try it Thatâs about it! Hope this helps! xÂ
Do you think self-study could be useful before starting Computer Science at college? And what would be best, like programming languages or maybe something else? I'm currently a high school student with too much free time and no idea if CS is really the subject for me so even if self-study isn't necessary, I'd love to look into it. Thank you!
Yeah, self-study is one of the most important things while studying CS. Well, by self-study, I mean self-programming because that way you learn the most. I recommend thenewbostonâs courses on youtube. They have a lot of languages!! Check out their âplaylistsâ tab. The videos are short (under 10min) and explained so that everyone would understand.Â
While watching the videos you wonât probably gain any theoretical knowledge so youâd have to download/buy some books for that. Anything is good tbh. I recommend: âThinking in Javaâ (Java), ââThinking in Cppâ (C++) or âSymphony in C++â (C++). I havenât had any books for Python (and I regret that!!) so youâd have to research that.Â
Check this post of mines out as well :) Lots of useful links.
Good luck!Â