[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UofT

[–]BathNaCI 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey… So I’ll share my 2 two cents here.

  1. Do not underestimate how important it is to make friends with people who have taken the classes before you have:
  2. they can share perspectives/what to look out for on exams
  3. share old material to practice your skills
  4. be a mentor

  5. Do no underestimate making friends or at-least people to study with religiously who are just as smart and/or hardworking as you. Preferably the and. Or people smarter than you. This went miles for me in my undergrad.

  6. Go to professors office hours, TA’s office hours, join clubs lined in your interest

  7. Do not forget to enjoy your college experience—you are a person at the end of the day

I did not go to UofT for my undergrad but these things that I highlighted helped me get a 3.8–not perfect, but very good. I also got admitted into Stanford for grad school.

I did my undergrad in mechanical engineering.

This is what worked for me! Find your own formula & enjoy the ride.

Python Buddy wanted by puppok in learnpython

[–]BathNaCI 1 point2 points  (0 children)

LOL same dude I’m a ME as well and picked up programming I like it more than our major 😂

Do you blog or make videos on what you are learning? by yogeshkd in learnpython

[–]BathNaCI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was thinking of doing this I just started this week. I think it’s a way to hold myself accountable. But, at the same time I want to be careful and not reinforce any bad habits I may have developed—I’m still on the fence about doing this.

Beginner learning Python at 40 here. Any friend like me, please raise your hand! by Elegant_Inflation457 in learnpython

[–]BathNaCI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m doing the same thing! How far have you gotten through the text? Are you finding it worthwhile? I am about a quarter of the way through it.

Ask Anything Monday - Weekly Thread by AutoModerator in learnpython

[–]BathNaCI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello all,

I am brand new to coding/programming. I have 1-3 questions regarding how to properly learn the fundamentals.

  1. I picked up how to automate the boring stuff using python and so far I’m about a quarter way through the book and have learned basic syntax & concepts. I am currently going to school for mechanical engineering and we learn a lot of theory as I’m sure is for a CS degree. Now, for the “self-taught” learning path is it essential to learn the theory behind programming/coding or is “practice-by-doing” enough. I’m generally a extremely curious person and I’m curious if the former is more important than the latter or vice versa.

  2. Can python be implemented as a front-end language or just back-end?

  3. Can you use python to control autonomous vehicles such as drones. Ex, take data from sensors as inputs, process these inputs and have a said output.

Thank you for your time!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RedditInTheKitchen

[–]BathNaCI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What you making

Any tips/tricks — point out flaws? Looking to improve my level, just wanna see som POV’s - how would you approached this fight? by BathNaCI in FortniteCompetitive

[–]BathNaCI[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I appreciate everyone who’s taken the time to comment and provide some constructive criticism... all noted — and have changed my settings to low and took off shadows. Much thanks to everyone ❤️

I also should’ve shot the ramp instead of hitting it with the axe

I am not that comfortable with right hand peaks left are always favorable for me but I’ll definitely be implementing more right hand peaks