c++ aside, you have an amazing console collection, nes, n64, gamecube, wii, gameboy, switch, ps5, ps3 60gb. I am also planning to collect my childhood dream consoles and I also loves c++. Its my preferred language in data structure round. Although I am ok-ish in it, I am practicising it more often. Btw subscribed :)
I’m 43 and have 18+ years in C++ and 10/18 is trading systems. I still learn things by doing/implementing basic stuff like Coding Jesus mentioned. It is vital. Keep up the great work. Cheers.
Let's be honest most people coming out of college right now are Chat-GPTing the f*ck out of their C++ scripts to make it easier, so that's probably why they don't even know basic syntax.
@@aarushedu No it just makes coding excerpts easier but LLMs have a hard time with complex full-stack projects. I was working on a web app with API connection to a cloud database(AWS) and even with context, GPT had no idea why my API route wasn’t working. Keep in mind 5-10 years ago people in the SWE industry were panicking when Python libraries were coming onto the scene.
@@dr.woozie7500 i honestly agree. i feel like at the end of the day AI is just gonna make the job easier but the real value in coding and stuff i feel from the beginning was just understanding how it works and how you can apply it to stuff, not actually just typing lines of it.
@@aarushedu It won't be able to fawk with middle level developers up but it's fawking next generation of developers. AI is producing a generation of lazy ass.
@@MrDarkduran good, then anyone who actually puts the time in and understands what the code means is going to succeed. again anyone can just generate code or type it by looking at something, its just how quickly you understand it and can solve logic and other problems. (and how they can apply it to different fields of course)
Have my interviews for 3 HFTs in next month, I am switching from C++ dev ( 3 years experience) to HFT (insane C++) I love C++ the more i am diving in it
Hi Coding Jesus! Love the vlogs you make and I watch your videos to see what do quants do. I see most of your recommendations revolve around knowing C++ programming language internals, and TCP/IP networking stuff, but how about: * which C++ libraries or APIs (like potentially parallel programming APIs such as CUDA, or networking libraries like boost asio) except STL is important as quant dev * What other programming tools, like profilers, linters, debuggers, test platforms, etc. are important? How often do you use them? * Are DevOps tools like Prometheus, Grafana, Terraform, etc. play a critical role in becoming skillful Quant Developer, or are these things used by separate team(s) or even not used at all? * How about knowledge about FPGAs, embedded systems, or other forms of traditionally-not-viewed as computers but advanced software runnable machines? Is knowing about them essential, nice-to-have, or irrelevant? I'd be happy if you can answer these!