Imagine in job everyone is waiting for you to fix the error and you just staring at your screen on stack overflow cause no one ever asked something like that
Yes it gives me different type of emotions, i feel like I'm asking so much basic and stupid question or I'm the only person who is advance enough to ask this high level of question
Cant be more true dude, I'm going to be a CS major and I have practice with some intermediate level programs in 2-3 languages (Still kinda shit in libraries) and I bet it's going to help in learning to actually fuckin code
Calculus not gonna bother you ,until you chooses AI ,graphic designing, game development ,for the development of softwares you need to know about discrete mathematics
@@pranjalarora3193i guess stack overflow is a website, like Quora , where we ask our queries related to programming which we sort out , and some professional programer reply those , most of the time same query had been already asked and answer, but sometimes no one had asked some query, so when you search that out , so you have to wait for a long time , for the response of professional, hope so it help to understand it 😂😂
@@pranjalarora3193this may be probably late what he means is -- Stack overflow Is a websites where people ask questions about coding problems and erros, million of people use it so it has most answers to almost every questions related to cs , but if you don't get any answer to your question then you have to do your own research for your problem ..
@@pranjalarora3193 That means nobody has seen an asked question already or nobody knows the answer to it. Meaning you have to do a deeper search of what you want to do, like reading the poorly documented libraries or figuring out what library you need to use or how you can code it properly.
This is how I felt after I did Nuclear reactor operations. After 3 years, one day I woke up and was like, woah. Am I a nuclear God now? And I'm going into CS soon and I feel like I'm struggle a lot at first but some years down the line I'll sit there and be like ohh... easy. (Hopefully 😅)
Mate do not give up. Even I am in my 3rd year of Engineering(semester 6) that too in Electronics Engineering. Think of my situation. Dead but still surviving 😂.
@@risuuu5875 if you are bad at memorising computer science is better to take.CS dosent have large applied maths at 11th and 12th if you understand the logic behind it CS will be rewarding and interesting
expectations: data structures, algorithm, programming and chill reality: dbms, operating system, computer networks, toc, compiler, computer organization, digital logic, mathematics & dsa and + many more subjects
As someone learning computer science right now (at a basic level), here is a short song that I think accurately describes my experience (*clears throat*): *99 little bugs in the code,* *99 little bugs,* *Take one down, patch it around,* *137 little bugs in the code!*
When I watched this before jee, I was like mujhe to milegi nhi cs meko kya inn sab se After one year of being a cse student, every pic made sense to me 🤡
@@khurram_kaiuu I learn that topic too in math computing along with some basic calculus (my fav topic) in IT course but it's not that hard than discrete math
Funnily enough I didn't like it at first, then it became my favorite and I scored 95% in the final. It's a lot of practice, it gets super easy with repetition.
I just want to solve interesting problems, like those one at the "codeforces" . And actually I study math right now (but it's not cs), so...can I apply for cs in the future?
While they are not unrelated, and there would be coding involved, CS mostly deals with the advancement of computing. Programming for other reasons is engineering, not science. And I don't say this to degrade engineering, ie. I don't mean to say CS is somehow better or more difficult. In any case, if you ever studied any kind of science, physics, maths, etc people see you as a teacher, while if you studied anything CS/CE people see you as a router tech or a printer mechanic... they might even have suggestions for you and they always know better than you.
honestly i was too but it‘s really not that bad. as long as you won‘t give up when there‘s the slightest bit of math involved - it‘s usually harder than it looks :) don‘t worry too much
It's not like that, math isn't that scarry , maybe it is , but the thing is it has not much to do with practical work after degree , like for job , it's just kind like university culture , you may choose any field you find easy after , degree , as it allows in variety of field, i was scared though , but it's broad scope, and handsome salary motivated me , so now I'm in 4th semester , it's really not that hard as i was scared , just sane as we have been studying untill now , give your best , that's all we need, and I'm planing to go in web development as my 1st job , have already learned html css, which are extremely easy , you should try to , will help you to figure out whether you should go into this field or not , and i have also learned basic structure of c++
Most of the discrete math/logic/algorithms in this video are mainly used to teach you foundational concepts, to think logically, and how to use binary, hexadecimal, et cetera. Once you pass the classes (with a good grade without cheating/coasting by) it gets a lot easier and a lot more fun. After that, almost any equations you need to do can ultimately be done in an IDE, where there will be a library for it and plenty of documentation. Go to class, ask questions, do your homework, practice the problems in your own spare time, go to office hours, and you should be more than okay. Protip: if your University requires you to take electives, take an electrical or mechanical engineering course. I know people are tempted to take something easy like Intro to Film or something like that, but if you take an EE/ME class, it can help reinforce some logic concepts, you’ll network with people outside of your major that you can possibly work with one day, and once you graduate you can confidently apply to places that work closely with or handle a lot of Electrical/Mech Engineering, like Boeing, Intel, telecom, et cetera; You’ll have more field specific language and knowledge than any other Com Sci grads applying for the same position. It pays off.
@@dewanshparashar5523 Not really it's more about intrest. As a coder I will admit it was fking pain at the start but it just meant you have to put more efforts then the guys who are already good at it. Logical thinking isn't some skill you are born with you just become good at it by trial and errors. As for maths idk man just keep practicing 😂
@BULLY MAGUIRE Flawed thinking. You can say that for every major. By that logic the conclusion is just don't study anything because eventually there would be more graduates and competition every year.
@aayush mundhe Bro don’t listen to these guys, you don’t need crazy math at all. Only time u do is for your doing machine learning. You can be a very savvy computer scientist with basic understanding of math, you don’t need to be an expert in all that extra shit.
When I learnt HTML and CSS in class 8 I thought computer is easy and interesting so, I took computer application in class 9 and after learning JAVA and PYTHON I came to know what actually it is
*sigh* I just started with HTML and I'm already scared about learning Java and Python, then there's the other languages as well... I suppose I'll have to hope that having the will to learn all kinds of programming languages is gonna be enough to get me through
@@furiousdestroyah9999rather than studying all kinds of languages , you should primarily focus on two or three languages which are more industry relevant
I regret taking this and I can’t do anything about it now. CS is too complex for me and I am no longer interested in it, my teacher doesn’t care and my class is goofy
You know I am learning computer science on my own since I'm a medical engineer. And combined with these 2 hobbies of mine I feel I unlock more than ever. My maths improved My critical thinking And problem solving skills too And this is just after 1 year
Bro literally I can do this all day without getting tired, even I enjoy doing programming with difficult codes... I am a 12th pass out and an IIT aspirant, and wishing to opt CSE not because of package but because I enjoy it😃...
as someone who has taken computer science lessons, i can confirm that this is innacurate we all know that computer science lessons have virtually nothing to do with computers and are essentially just the miscellanious lessons.
This is so true, don’t forget to mention losing 90% of your social life because you now live and breath constantly studying. Don’t also forget the fact that on top of your cs classes you are most likely on your own attempting to learn like 3 languages at a time. 😂 stay strong kings, we got this
Broo, all those mathematical scary images and formulas you have seen just LOOKS horrifying, it's not difficult, those things were some of the easiest chapters we learn in class 11th 12th except that robbins-monro thing. ps: I am not any kind of a topper, just an avg class 12th student.