Nice beginner guide, will be nice if you make more advanced videos on rust. Your explanation is cool, slowly paced and not just rushing like other videos. Btw, cute desk setup.
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-LjIe4w_-vzk.htmlsi=1lAkz_sHH-E6Op-v A useful video to take a look at each of the two languages and learn about the orientation and philosophy of each language. Rust may be an inappropriate choice or it may be the most appropriate choice for your thinking and philosophy!
Hello there. I hope you can guide me in this situation. I am a bba graduate and have been learning full stack development on and off for the past 9 months and discontinued it for a few months because of some personal reasons. Now again I'm gonna apply somewhere but i am a bit sceptical if i apply to a course and if they don't give me the placement thn there is no hope for me . I am pretty confused with what should i choose because i am from non technical background and i need placement assistance in some form . Where should i go- should i go with internshala course, gradly ,my captain or harkirat singh's cohort . Currently i am doing a bootcamp on udemy by Colt but it isn't doing much for me and the project he has is pretty outdated and Nonsensical.
@@naumanmirza1927 6 months atleast, but if you want to understand his course you should have a good understanding of Datastructures and few algorithm, not only his course but any courses will be easier if you have basics of dsa completed.
sis , You're amazing ! I started learning Rust, but quickly realized it's meant for building really solid systems that are usually handed over to the senior developers. It's not exactly the friendliest language for developers. Good luck on your journey! (i started Go lang)
I've come to truly believe that diving into a new programming language brings both fresh enjoyment and a completely new perspective to programming. This year, I decided to pick up Elixir, and wow, functional programming is truly remarkable. The approach to programming in functional languages is simply amazing.
The truly mind-boggling thing is that once you reassign arr inside the function, the reference to the original array is also obliterated and from this moment forward you're only dealing with arr in the function scope. Don't believe me? Try pushing 6 after arr is being reassigned and the result will be [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] [1, 6] Oh yes, JavaScript... What language you truly are 😂
It returns 0 1 2 because of the fact that closure(that anonymous function) retains access to that count variable throughout execution of program so the value of count gets updated each time when we call c( ).
7 minutes and I understood that you are a noob. You don't know tree, don't know git init with path. I think you don't event know the --depth on git clone. Learn and then teach others
This is not a tutorial, and it was clearly stated in the video that I’m exploring git internals for the first time. I am not afraid to say when I don’t know about something, there could be millions of other things that I don’t know about. I would rather have a “beginner’s mentality” than be an arrogant self-proclaimed expert.
@@thecodedose I mean "Dark Modern". The "Dark Modern" theme can definitely lend a professional and sleek look to any learning environment. Anyway thank you for your response! Engaging with viewers and learners is indeed important for fostering a supportive learning community. It's great to hear you're thinking about how presentation impacts learning and engagement. Keep up your efforts in giving back to the learning society-it makes a real difference!
Watch part 2 here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-nPbT1-MGZB4.html Watch my Git & GitHub tutorial series here: ru-vid.com/group/PL-1u5s1R5AZ1jHTaM0pmCJIeVLdB2jAEe