Thanks for watching yo, I hope y'all finished the semester strong. Thanks Grammarly for being my first sponsor :) Use Grammarly to help you finish your last-minute assignments! You can sign up for a FREE account and get 20% off Grammarly Premium: grammarly.com/fryingpan Happy winter vacation :D
I mean, yeah you´re doing youtube and stuff but I did count 4+3+4+4= 15 Credit points you made the whole semester. Dont quite get how you are calling that "hard" as 30 cp/ semester are mandatory to study in time
@@MrFalingdown @MrFalingdown 15 creds a semester, 2 semesters per year, 4 years == 15 x 2 x 4 = 120 == full program. Ain't nobody doing 30 creds per semester here
Can you plz share your Cgpa...! And how you're maintaining it(the way you're handling it) .. I'm definitely struggling a lot here! ( it's kinda like a die-hard challenge for me) 😨Thank you very much!....!
@@FryingPan Well have to apologize here. Apparently 2 ECTS equal 2 CP in Germany and 1 CP in the US. That means that your 15 US-CP would equal 30 in Germany.
This year I had done 4 units for winter session, 12 units for Spring session, 12 units for summer session, and 15 units for Fall session. I went to copy the similar road for computer engineer degree over computer science degree even though I major on bachelor science of computer science degree. I just don't complete CE classes. The road for computer engineer degree always had classes on summer session for a full time student, since it required more units done over computer science degree. I treated the bs cs degree like bs ce degree. Also, there was 2 kind of degrees for associate, bachelor, master, and ph. d: reveal and hidden. Hidden happens when you are not successful to fulfill the requirement for the bachelor degree and cannot go to another level of the degree. Reveal happens you fulfill the requirement what the professor wants.
I'm entering my final year of Comp Sci so I'm basically working on websites like this one too😅 for winter break i plan on making a simple portfolio website
I'm currently a web developer, and I definitely wish my university had more web classes. I took the only one on offer which was web design, but I feel like we didn't really learn anything about modern technologies at my school except for some elective classes. In all I still pretty much have to learn everything else on my own with crippling student loan debt. But hey, at least I don't have to work fast food anymore.
Oh I thought my school was the only one that slacked on the Web development part... Hell they thought us html css database all under a 3 month year 1 module and the part-time lecturer was a joke 😔
@@xxnowyouseemexx4207 I feel like I've learned more in the 9 months at my job than I did in all 4 years of school lol. That's not to discredit school though, it's still important and you discover alot about yourself at college. But that's kinda how it just goes with CS, you learn through experience. But my Web Design prof was a g. Genuinely cared about the subject and even went over the material I was going to be questioned about in my interview with me. If it weren't for him I definitely wouldn't be where I am.
I had my hardest semester too with AI, OS, Concepts of Programming Languages, and an Undergraduate Seminar class. It was hours of grueling work and all nighters, but proved to be rewarding. Im glad both you and I were able to learn useful skills in the world of CS and I think they will prepare us for what is to come in the industry. Good luck on your future endeavors and happy holidays 💯
Hey, a well meaned question: After you finished it, would you say you now understand every single thing about these? Could you derive all the taught results by yourself? Can you now solve any problem you got shown, and could you come up with problems/conjectures on your own? Could you teach any interested person about these?
@@Wabbelpaddel That's a great question. Taking these classes at the same time proved to be difficult in order to understand the aspects in detail, but at least I was exposed to the crucial concepts of these subject areas and now I am inspired more than ever to deepen my understanding in areas I thought were gray. For example, in my OS class, I learned about the concept of Deadlock, and I know the general and overall idea of it and even tried to tackle some applicative problems about it, but I definitely need to sharpen my understanding about it and am currently doing it by practicing and studying interview questions.
How did you learn to structure a project? I have given up on all the major projects I started because they soon overwhelm me due to poor planning. Do I completely code the backend first? Or maybe completely code feature by feature? Is there something like a one size fits all in this scenario or its trial and error and see what works for me?
Usually I start with completing the major features on the front-end before the back-end, it helps me see what sort of API endpoints I need plus the visual of the front-end is something that can help u keep going more. Usually have a rough design of how the product will look like with major features and try to implement those first. Then iteratively add more features later. Maybe more experienced people can add to this hmm
My personal philosophy is to go with the backend first and see how I can wrap it with the front end. I have the mindset that I cannot have a program if it doesn't have a backend, so its extremely crucial that aspect is functional. It'll most likely require a lot of research.on what libraries and APIs to use as well. Then, the frontend can start to be developed after or concurrently. Feature by Feature is a great way to go as well because then you can test and debug that certain feature whether it is its own script, file, or function that you can debug and test. A good way to think about it is to start easy and with fundamentals and build upon that foundation.
I took program language and paradigm class (D+), artificial intelligence class (B), intro to database system class (A), computer network class (A), and human-computer interaction class (A) for Fall 2021 semester. 3.26 gpa for fall 2021. i did not do well on program language and paradigm.
I had a lot of hard exams in my computer science university. Good I improved my skills at cheating in exams and now I work as Web developer and doing fine. University is useless.
I feel for you on certain classes you talked about. I'm currently a senior and just got done with AI and Operating Systems. I'm absolutely trash at Probability and Statistics but I got a handle of the course alright. Probably the hardest course I have taken (so far). The operating systems course was super interesting and I loved it. I took a web development course last year first semester and I loved it as well. But I think it's because I had a teacher that I enjoyed before so that always helps. And databases aren't the hardest to understand but yes ER diagrams are bullshit at first.
I know I could probably google my question, but how do I get into Web Dev and what frameworks do I use? I know fair amounts of Javascript and have used the most common tags used in HTML. How did you get to where you are, in reference to Web Dev
Well, I took web dev classes on the last semester on college, so I know the basics. We took a look at the history of web, then started with pure HTML, then started to progress further. Before using frameworks, we already had an idea on different kinds of layouts (flex,grid, etc) and only then we started with bootstrap(it's the easiest one I guess) and only after we started including JS and other technologies. From the few experience I have, I would recommend learning things one by one(since that worked pretty well for me) and then start to mix them up. It's like building a house, you need a good foundation before anything, just make sure you don't skip anything that may see "unnecessary" or "useless" at the moment.
I woulda say it depends on what you want out of web dev. If you are looking to work for an established company, it would probably be more beneficial to learn frameworks like angular or react. Meaning javascript/typescript and html
Unless you don't like learning about how computers work i would stick with Computer engineering. If you really want to take the web development classes i would advise switching to software engineering. The other option is to stick with Computer engineering, knock out all your general education courses over the summer plus some of your major pre-requisites. This will allow you more room in your junior/senior years to take some outside electives like the web development class you wanted.
it's not the best but I think worth to take. you'll be introduced to some outdated technologies but the core of the class is on design patterns which is useful + the project is a full stack app which is also useful.
This vid literally just reminded me of that one activity I haven't submitted yet because I've desided to just enjoy my holiday break by doing nothing but watching RU-vid videos 🙃
COMP 353's final was absolute trash though, and it didn't even cover NoSQL; terrible course, I wouldn't recommend it at all. Yun dan kuai le! (xi nian kuai le is next month 😆)
i followed the 100DaysOfCode challenge . but I couldn't do it . I will try to continue it . I am currently finished my 2nd year and moving to the 3rd year on my IT degree . dude I am lacking on developing/coding skills . I am worrying too much about them . I think I am too late now
Making ERD is hard but it's harder to apply normalization on it. Still remembers struggling so much to make it in first semester and the test is to make a database where you can search the asked data (whether it's grade or attended class) by LEFT and RIGHT JOIN. But definitely a fun class since it feels cool.
the way you introduced the grammarly deserved insta like. Love the vids, becouse of your channel i decided to start learning coding again after 4 years
I'm a 3rd year computer science student from the Philippines. Right now I also have a Database class, an Operating systems class, a software engineering class, a Numerical Computing II class, and a programming language class (not studying any specific prog lang but in general). It's been pretty rough lately. My semester will end on January 2022 and idk if I can still survive all these shits
Hey, a well meaned question: After you finished it, would you say you now understand every single thing about these? Could you derive all the taught results by yourself? Can you now solve any problem you got shown, and could you come up with problems/conjectures on your own? Could you teach any interested person about these?
It’s been awesome watching your videos over the past few months as I’ve done my internship and just the amount of stuff I’m understanding when you say it. Like deadlock, sql, and jdbc
Ryan I love your videos, mainly because it really feels like the most reliable source of new information. Just watching the videos, we can understand the amount of work that goes into making these. Totally appreciate the videos and sick gameclips btw
yay! I just love watching your videos, man, I am a first year student of computer science and you inspire me a lot. I self taught myself 2 coding languages, and honestly, thank you so much for your videos, it just motivates me for god knows what reason XDD. Merry Christmas.
though imagine if you can replicate twitch or youtube's recommendation via a gans network or Sindy base network. Such that you can predict whether or not a video will land on front page via replicating in a similar network. Then do an auto-endcoder decoder version of that basically tell you what video content you need to make in order to hit front page. Holy jeeze advertiser and streamer will literally pays tens of million for that if you can crack the recommendation code, cause that will save them thousand of hour in content creation trail and error and data gathering.
While I have seen ads about Grammarly some time, it has always been "fixes typos for you and comma". Now seeing that it can also find synonyms and rephrase. you got me sold! (Especially as I have to write scientific papers soon... I had a friend help me last time to rephrase basically everything for 10 hours straight xD)