Hey guys! Here are links to some of the resources I mentioned in the video :) Codecademy: www.codecademy.com/ freeCodeCamp: www.freecodecamp.org/ Pluralsight: goo.gl/BemGyV Lynda.com: www.lynda.com/ What Programming Language To Learn First: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-poJfwre2PIs.html Python Tutorials for Absolute Beginners (a playlist): goo.gl/4dQMsJ
Hello CS Dojo. Thank you for your videos! You have taught me what my school couldn't. Could you please make a video about Big O notation and Computational Theory. That would help A LOT! I haven't found one good video about that subject (please go slow because that is a very difficult subject for me) -> How to calculate the Big o of an algorithm -> Prepositions -> functional programming (maybe)
Hi mate. I’m a 56 year old Australian with 2 x 20+ year old sons who are coders. I’ve been thinking of trying my hand at it also to continue our family connections. I just wanted to say that THIS VIDEO you made for beginners is the BEST I HAVE SEEN and has really inspired someone like me. Your delivery, knowledge, pace and understanding of the information new people are looking was terrific. I’ve subscribed and will be watching a lot more of your videos. Just wanted to say thanks very much. Good luck in your future. From Perth, Western Australia Brad.
@I'm a Motherfucker • 67 years ago Maybe with experience, but I just started, how the hell am i suppose to know what to write where, that's the thing I dont understand
@I'm a Motherfucker • 67 years ago yeah I think i need patience indeed, been on it for 5 days only xD . Hope it will click indeed but already understand a lot i think, well see in a month how it goes, it was my plan anyway to wait that much until thinking of giving up lool
"Soo you applied to a job for a software engineer. What experience do you have?" A youtuber thought me to apply for a jov as soon as possible. I programmed yesterday my first hello world application...
I did a class on HTML and CSS in 9th grade and I honestly thought it was really fun, but I ended up with a D in the class, so I just felt like it wasn't for me. This video popped up in my recommended and i feel motivated to keep learning HTML and CSS and more :) thanks for this~
I like how you mention how difficult and intimidating setting up an environment can be for beginners. Also, I like the mention of Bitcoin and the project discussion overall. One thing that motivates me as a beginner is building simple projects but based on or related to large, complex things. In terms of tutorials you, Algo-man, and Tim are the big 3 ! lol
As my first projects, I chose to make Discord bots. Just simple things, like collecting message data (length of messages, how much each letter occurs per message, etc.), and leaderboards for servers using that data. This is great for learning important things like databases, and a lot of basic stuff. Totally recommend it.
In my Cs and programming path i've been through so many rabbit holes that i've lost count of them, gasping and almost drowning in an ocean of concepts and theories, and almost got stuck forever in a '" i don't know what i'm doing i am soooo stupid i cannot deal with myself anymore" belief, but my resilience is mammoth and finally, all by myself found the way out of this labyrinth, still a lot to go but i see the light in front of me.
@Magistar M Nope, I am a high schooler now in my final year though I worked on various group projects on "programming" with my friends. I took some offline courses on python, now I know intermediate level python. I also learnt MySQL and Web Designing(HTML and CSS), I also took Computer Science Classes in my High School, although Programming is just my secondary hobby, I mostly focus on my School Studies and give more focus to Maths, Physics and Chemistry as these are my favourite subjects. So, yeah overall it's going amazing and once I clear my college entrance exam I would major in CS and Engineering.
Hello, I am sorry to comment here after a long time😅 but this video was a couple of years ago and I am afraid no one would see my comment. When he mentioned step 2 he said "start building your personal projects" that is after learning the basics. The thing is projects honestly seem really intimidating and I feel like I'm not ready to build a project even though it's been 2 years since I've learned all the basics he mentioned in the video. I think I should mention this as well. I didn't do that many exercises on programming at all so do you think I should start a project right away(Considering that I know the fundamentals really well) or should I do some practice before jumping to building a project? Please if you have the time I'd really appreciate it if you answer my question. Thank you in advance :))
@@mathabahassan3471 I’d say that you should just start working on a project since that really is, in my experience the best way to reinforce the basics you’ve learned.When you’re learning programming, as long as you aren’t doing something like preparing for a coding interview or something important like that, it isn’t really necessary to do much exercise, as long as you keep on actually using the stuff you’ve learned, and if you forget anything Stack Overflow is always your friend.(or documentation)
Could not agree more with what you discuss. everything you point out has been of benefit for myself over the last 30 years learning technology at numerous levels independently. You definitely got your stuff together; excellent video! The links are awesome too btw; take care and keep the vids coming.
GREAT CHANNEL ! Pls make some more videos - about which books to read (intermediate level programmers) - about types of programmers Keep up the great work !
Jeez, man. That's one of the most useful videos I've seen in the area on RU-vid. Thanks so much for sharing all this information. I've just started learning programming. And the thing that echoes in my head is how I will get a job being so new in this, or if it's possible to get on without a graduation, but, who knows. We have plenty of time. Many thanks. ;)
I do not know why I ended here but I can say "congrats to this guy for his remarkable job". I think for that persons who wants to learn coding, he is offering them a great and detailed help.
Hey! I am just starting to branch out into programming from a background in Chemistry and Physics. Your videos are inspiring and very helpful! Thank you for taking the time to share your wisdoms with the world :) I really appreciate the sacrifice you made to pursue this, and you're definitely helping to bring novice programmers into the fold!
I'm 53 years old and will be working towards a degree in Web Design. I've been learning coding on my own for over a year with the sites w3schools, codecademy, and freecodecamp. Codecademy is by far my favorite.
I watched several of your videos and all I can say is "Wow". Mainly because I am in the exact situation you are describing throughout the whole video! I am beginning to learn how to code.. all the way to, 4 years is too long for another computer science degree. I noticed you might be from Vancouver, so in September I will be taking the Software Developer program at BCIT. Thank you so much for your videos!
Sammy maness Bro congratulations i too completed the basics but how would you build projects like for ex tictac toe i can write source code for that but how to really implement it in graphical way so users use it or anything else like these If you have any solutions or suggestions please help me bro
@@viswamohan5258 Well you have to set up a coding environment, for example Visual Studio Code or PyCharm and install Python on it. Then just look for simple games or projects for beginners on youtube and google and when you get the hang of it try more complex things. And after that, I would try to practice skills that are useful for jobs.
Some projects idea for beginners -> agenda, task control, Facebook (Posts and comments only), calculator (with basic operations), Users management (Create, Read, Update and Delete). It is a very good beginning.
I just started seeing your videos, it was osm,explanation is really good,we understanding clearly,i think someone who r watching ur videos they will become a big fan u because of how excited they feel to learn, thanq u so much bro.......love u from india,
I like the way you cover everything necessary on this (and all the other videos that I have begun to watch) in a complete and timely manner. No dead video space wasted. Well done. Carry on ...
Yet another great video YK.! Thank you. Your videos are extremely useful for someone who's not from CS background. I'm a mechanical Engineer but I'm interested in python programming but I had no idea where to start. Watched your videos and since then following your guidelines. Keep making such great videos and keep inspiring us.
I think u doesn't know that u r a great explainer and u have a great talent that is how your audience could understand your voice with a bit of comedy u knew already including your cute face and smile as well..Keep it up bro I subscribed your channel coz your videos are really very insipirable for mostly programmers and software engineers..Thanks a lot..
First and only video on RU-vid which actually td how to start coding rather than sharing experience and blah blahhhhh ......i really appreciate it man and also thanks
Awesome video YK! You answer basically all questions a beginner might have and give additional insights that are really useful (for me that was the point about the possibilities for making connections). Thanks a lot! :)
I want to learn Python and one of the resources I want to use is RU-vid videos. Your channel is the best one I've found (by far). The videos you publish are informative, easy to understand, and interesting.
I know this is old, but it’s not recommended that you use an IDE when you’re first starting out. If i used an IDE i would’ve never learned how to call methods properly because it’s easy to just add a period and select something that sounds good from the drop down box
Hey! Thanks for guiding so beautifully. Finally there's someone who just gets on point! I have a question, "How many programming languages do you have your hands in?"
Pretty informative. I would agree with all what has been said about software dev. First dev projects are important but for example bitcoin analyse tool - is not a project for beginners at all.
im entering 2nd year of my b.tech of computer science(graduation) I've learned basic(oops consept) in c++ and java now i need help for my next step in programming
Thank you so much for making this video. It made a very scary subject For me more understandable and clear. Thank you thank you for sharing your knowledge!
May I suggest KhanAcademy as another resource to learn to code? I learned Processing 5 on KhanAcademy very easily because it allowed you to pause a video and then interact with the code being showed!
You will need to work on some statistics, a statistic heavy project, like a program that calculates the probability of some people of some characteristics to ...Idk fall in love ?
Mohit Motwani You could download data from the web: say like, financial, environmental, media or service, and run scenarios with coding for analyzing patterns in the data, performing forecast of a variable(s) for example .
Thanks for this video and hopefully more and more people would be touch by your videos. Helped me a lot because im planning to apply in the industry as a programmer.
One day I’ll be a coder and work at a big data company and reply to this video that I made it! Thanks for all this information time to get started on my journey! 💪
So when should I realize that I can build a personal project I mean I almost completed python basics but don't know how to create an game like breakout
When learning a new language, I always start out like this: learn console and file input/output first and then fan outward after you have that mastered. works for me......