The best advice he said for any learners: 'don't push yourself too hard or you will end up giving up'. Indeed, doing coding for 30 minutes for 6, 12, 18 months should be beginners' goal! Thanks!
@@aewohiuwefhweu yeah tbh only 30 mins is just impractical and i think you won’t spend more time on it but more days with less time if that’s understandable
I loved the way how he encouraged me by saying :- 1) anyone can learn to code.... it just takes time... 2) you can feel yourself to be a rookie and others expert.... 3) don't listen to anyone just start coding with python.... This guy is very honest from within as what he said really shows how others can mislead you on your coding journey..... Thanks buddy....
I'm really thankful with this channel. I have followed many of the instructions of yours. Now although I don't consider myself an expert, I'm currently have a job as backend programmer and data analyst using python.
The amount of work you put into your videos is insane. If you ever run out of python/programming video ideas, maybe make a "behind the scenes" video of how much work and detail you put into filming and editing a single episode. I wouldn't be surprised if the amount of detail it entaills compares quite well to the complexity of an average but lengthy algorithm.
Great video. A little suggestion though, MIT 60001 course: Introduction to computer science and programming using python. is one of the great places for a beginner to start.
The answer to that fearful question that arises from deep within beginners as they venture into World of computing and programming, has been answered well in this video. A real motivator for coding.
With people saying that "python is used by newbies and they should start with C or else the problem solving skill wont be there", your videos motivate me the most. Thank you sir
Hello, i don't know your name or who you are but i just wanted to say THANK YOU. You've helped me in succeeding in my career. I'm an industrial engineer but i like coding. Recently i secured a head position at an important company because of this. People like you make our society progress, and this world a better place.
The scene in the end is brilliant! Is that one of the side effects of pushing yourself too hard (6:08)? Love the commitment, sir! I don't usually ring the bell, this time I just had to. People lets be honest here, we all feel the same way: RING THE BELL!
Just loved the first part! It was refreshing to watch ! something new and interesting thats very much missing from our programming and tech community! subscribed to your channel, just for this, if nothing else!! LOL. I can see you put in good time and effort to entertain us! THANK YOU !
Another material I'd recommend is Brian Heinold's "Practical Introduction to Python Programming" There are lots of exercises at the end of each chapter Search for "CodingBat" on Google as well
I was an accountant and my job was to do many task that are repetitive and not fun at all, so i started finding short cuts and i always look for a shortest solution that brought me to coding Python and the reason i am a self taught because I am kind of person that would rather think really hard for 10 hours than keep doing the same shit over and over again. And seriously Python Syntax is easy to learn but not the Oceans of Modules, its a living hell for some people. I am recently learning Web scraping and god knows things i had to learn for that first BS4 Module but it was slow so i shifted to Scrapy which was supper hard but super fast and then I need selenium too, now learn to write xpath and css, learn html pattern and then i had to scrape the websites that are protected by cloudflare OMG. I now starting to feel like a hacker a little and its exciting.
Loved the video. Loved when you said "Other people will you give other suggestions, ignore them". I learnt Java as my first programming language during university. I can only speak from my experience as someone who has to program for university, but if you learn Java first migrating to python becomes more seamless.
Thank You for these all videos what You published! I am not going to use only one advice what You gave to us! About not pushing my self to hard! I'm pushing and I'm going to push myself even much harder! But when I feel that I burned out! I just need to see your videos and power fully charged! I moved to UK from Poland about 1 year ago ++month, so I hope after I'm going to jump into junior position till end 2020, I will have chance to meet You in career way somewhere in UK and to buy coffee with great sweet cake as a Thanks for all what you are doing here!
I almost gave up tonight.. been learning python on and of for almost a year and just have done 5 days in a row an hour a day. I clicked on this video thinking you would tell me to do something else. I just finished a section of a python tutorial on udemy after watching. Thank you for saving my life 🙏🏽
I just want you to know that you're the first channel that I've rung the bell for, simply because of the end scene. There's creativity in solving a problem!
This video's really helped me gain some better perspective. I had to learn python this year as part of an NLP master's degree and recently I've been soooo done with programming. Just started despising the logic, how unlike real life it seemed and how artificial it seemed. Now, I guess I know why I started hating it. I was pushing too much and frankly, a lot was expected from us that we had to learn on our own, e.g. virtual environments were never mentioned. Thank you for making this video and giving me the hope to once more enjoy programming, like I used to when I started.
This comment might be a bit late to get seen but I'll give it a go anyway! You mention in this video to do even 10-15-20 minutes a day. What I've been struggling with is how to make coding part of my daily life. I'd love to be able to be up and going so quickly but I find it takes me 30+ minutes to get everything loaded, figure out where I was and what I was trying to do next. Which means I need at least a set hour to feel like I make any progress forward. Any tips on ways to make coding easier to get rolling? I know if I can reduce the time to get started I'll be able to make much better progress!!
Questions 1 What is your view on Excel VBA is it (excel+vba) better than python? Questions 2 : If someone doesn't knoe even basics of programing like data types, strings, variable than which source help him to learn from starting is python helps in tjis also ( asking because many of my student from non science and programming background) I hope you answer fast .
Damn, love this video and feels like its come at the right time for me! Feel like the advice could be applicable to many skills other than coding also.
I'd really love to learn how to become a data scientist. I just feel like time is running out. With covid and my old job not being open. I feel like I need to learn everything yesterday. I''ll learn how to breathe eventually. blargh.
Hey, i really like your videos and i hope you can help ne. You know the julia sets have all different not integer dimensions. I think it would be very interesting to have a map of the mandelbrot set that shows the magnitude of the dimension of the julia set for that parameter c. So a higher dimension creates a darker point. So the program needs to create the julia set, then to calculate it's dimension (i think box-counting) and then to give the point a magnitude. I am a beginner at programming and i do not get it. But maybe you think it's interesting too and you take the challenge :)