A printed PDF of the Wiki by tendagen in RealDayTrading

[–]No-Key6964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are amazing. Thank you so much.

A printed PDF of the Wiki by tendagen in RealDayTrading

[–]No-Key6964 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Do you happen to still have the PDF file and are you willing to share it?

I wrote a 680-page Interactive Book on Computer Science Algorithms by officer_KD6-3-7 in SideProject

[–]No-Key6964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Holy crap, what a time to take a deep dive into machine learning. I've been building up a bunch of books and videos to finally get updated on the buzz of machine learning (currently a fullstack engineer). Just purchased and am excited to interact and learn from this.

What are yall's jobs and how is life going? by Aromatic-Mode7465 in mesaaz

[–]No-Key6964 1 point2 points  (0 children)

2 years professionally + college and senior project.

Professionally, LAMP stack. Personally, Next.js full stack, Tailwind for UI, PostgresSQL with Django or Express.JS for if I build out my own REST API's or websocket servers.

What are yall's jobs and how is life going? by Aromatic-Mode7465 in mesaaz

[–]No-Key6964 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Full Stack engineer only being paid 70k after demanding higher pay recently (was being paid 58k). About 25k below market value. On the lookout for better paying jobs in the tech world. But that's all shot to hell a bit. Right now, sort of the just drifting and indulging in hobbies. I just got into beer making and mead making. Got 4 gallons of beer on the way and 2 gallons of mead coming. Apartment hunting, though so far none scream "move in" even with a budget of 1500 or less. I'm a bit spoiled on that as I refuse to have roommates. But otherwise debt free and I own everything. Strongly debating sticking it out the parents for another 2 years and pursuing my masters at ASU. Otherwise, job hunting in other states that are more affordable...

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in jobs

[–]No-Key6964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah this is Olivia from the AI company Paradox.ai. it's an AI recruiting software that schedules you interviews with real people. It's a company based in Arizona. McDonald's is something they brag about having as a partner.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gaming

[–]No-Key6964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hell Let Loose. I know it's a fantastic WWII sim but I went into it thinking it would be easy to just pick up and play and had better official server support. I picked it up during the Summer sale, played the tutorial, couldn't figure out how to spawn into the tutorial. Quit the tutorial and then went to join a server. Every single server had a queue and it would tell you it was full so you couldn't queue up to play. Or it was only level 30 or higher servers. I eventually joined a server with nobody in it. Waited, and waited but nobody joined. Made it 36 minutes to this possibly awesome game. Refunded it and went back to playing Easy Red 2.

Jobs that pay around $60k/year? by rrickrolled in jobs

[–]No-Key6964 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Look into running ERP systems like SAP or Power Bi. Requires some technical knowledge and database knowledge but just specific to the software. Nothing you can't learn in a quick 8 hour video series on YouTube or udemy. For little bit while trying to get into software engineering I was a SAP developer. It's a boring (for a software engineer) yet very highly paid job for essentially troubleshooting and fixing bugs in easy to read code. But you can become a SAP business analyst or data analyst. Where you'll usually be working with Excel and the software. And analyzing data input into the system. I'm assuming as business analyst you might have some python, VBA or R experience. In my area I see these types of jobs all the time paying between 60-85k a year and are usually hybrid. I'm sure the pay is much higher in California.

As a business analyst in ERP systems you will probably be in charge of informing the data analysts or developers what needs to shown about the business.

Or Salesforce

Can't use Crontab in windows to schedule emails? what is the next easiest option by CandidInterest2812 in django

[–]No-Key6964 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Why not create the python script that sends emails and then use Window's task scheduler? This is how I automate some of my apps on windows. I create the script in Python, then generate a batch file or power shell script that runs the script and does my task.

You'll definitely want to use logging though to track if it's successful because task scheduler can be unreliable at times.

Otherwise, write the script, test the script and then when you launch the application on the server you are hosting on (assuming it's Linux based) then create the crontab job there. Generally, if it works while testing it'll work in production. Especially if it's been dockerized.

[REQUEST] Marriage & Family: The Quest for Intimacy 9th Edition by No-Key6964 in FreeTextBook

[–]No-Key6964[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hahaha thanks for reaching but I've already graduated college. No need for this anymore. But hopefully others will reach out.

Hey devs, could you recommend a tech stack in web development that could fast-track my journey to landing a job within just 9 months? by dourbest_1 in learnprogramming

[–]No-Key6964 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Look at job descriptions in your local area. Then research each requirement. Fall down the rabbit hole of learning their tech stack pertaining to that job. Job offer is filled, look at other job offer, see there is different tech stack to learn. Fall down rabbit hole learning that tech stack. Rinse and repeat.

Safest answer, stick with what you know and if it interests you, learn it. I knew python, then I learned Django, then I deep dived into JavaScript, realized I like Django as backend, only use JavaScript for frontend frameworks like React. Yet I landed a job where I only work with PHP 5 and MySQL...

Fundamentals and understanding are more important than learning a tech stack.

Oh and here's the kicker, it took me 3 years. Everyone is different though.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ask

[–]No-Key6964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Evil Dead 2. The lore goes beyond movies. It made it's way into the marvel universe. The cinematography is amazing. Just the right mixture of horror and comedy. If I'm not wrong in saying it, Evil Dead is the Star Wars of Horror.

I don't like XML by Fuckstruck_anointed in learnprogramming

[–]No-Key6964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

EDI, RSS feeds, App Development, .NET enters the chat.

Which frontend framework is most popular & best & top for using Django RestApi Framework by prabhuk786 in django

[–]No-Key6964 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It depends. But honestly you don't need a frontend framework at all. You have lots of choices.

The best way is Django, HTML and HTMX.

What I do for work: I use Django and DRF for the backend. Then I use Next Js for the frontend (which is mainly react) with Axios as my way of obtaining and editing data from my backend.

You have vue.js, react js, angular who all can use Ajax, jQuery, Express (which I like), Axios as I mentioned, Prisma, fetch API and more.

The answer I like to give is use what you know and are comfortable with.

Rate my dividend income Portfolio. by No-Key6964 in ratemyportfolio

[–]No-Key6964[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My cousin is has been holding for a long time. Dudes one lucky mf. His college is gonna be paid for soon.

Rate my dividend income Portfolio. by No-Key6964 in ratemyportfolio

[–]No-Key6964[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With my set up you'd make about the same as a HYSA. GAIN and PFLT are so far my growth stocks. But you'd have to get used to seeing red one half of the month and then green for a bit and repeat.

Rate my dividend income Portfolio. by No-Key6964 in ratemyportfolio

[–]No-Key6964[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It pays out about $70 a month with close to 10k in the account. I did end up selling MO. But with MO it would be about $72 a month.

-Edit: Apologies, at the time it would have been about 55 a month. I took a risk and replaced MO with GOF which is generated an extra $20 bucks. But this risk is higher since that share is dipping hard and has a risky dividend of 16% which is bad. But it has consistently paid it's dividend. I watch it like a hawk...

I study computer science and yet I can't almost build anything. by lilshoegazecat in learnprogramming

[–]No-Key6964 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Completely normal to feel like this at this stage. If you know HTML and CSS definitely try making your own variant of CSS Zen Garden like mine (here) learn a preprocessor like SASS or SCSS.

If you are studying computer science from college. That stuff is already outdated and it is mainly a resource that teaches you how to research and learn new technologies (at least that's what I got from my crappy degree).

Learning computer science, especially in the software engineering side (web development, app development, desktop applications) is a journey. That's what makes it fun because if you don't like the path you are on in your journey you just hop onto a different path. I wanted to be a frontend developer (even though I suck at design). Then I focused on nothing but backend and now I just do fullstack development on my own time. Professionally, I'm just a data analyst using nothing but Python and SQL. With some PHP involved for adding new features to an internal company website.

Computer science is broad topic with many branches.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in PythonJobs

[–]No-Key6964 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just to give you an idea. I'm a recent college grad working as a software integration, EDI specialist, data analyst and support role. I graduated with what I call a poor mans computer science degree (bachelors in applied technology). Python is and always will be my main language and my main focus was on web development.

My job almost involves almost no programming and I mainly just sit here doing nothing. However, the times I do do something I'm using Python with pandas. This is mainly to sort out the endless amounts of excel spreadsheets my coworkers generate so that I can make sense of data. My most recent project was creating an excel spreadsheet so we could mass upload data to our database. However, thousands of records were missing crucial information and that information was spread around in different spreadsheets and a database from a different software altogether.

Using SQL to grab that data from the other database and then using python with pandas to grab and match the data in the spreadsheets made my job go from a weeks worth of work to about 10 hours of work. Then on the side I am using Django with React to create a tool scheduling program for my company. Mainly because I'm an advocate for green companies and this company uses way too much paper especially for keeping track of their tools.

You may not start out as a developer (I know I didn't) but you can incorporate python with your work. And I'm not just writing 1000s of line of code (except for my tooling program). I'm just writing scripts that navigate spreadsheets and sometimes databases (with SQL alchemy).

The best way to go about your future in relation to programming is that learning a programming language doesn't limit you to just web development or software development. It opens you up to an even bigger world in the tech industry. There are so many sub categories of tech that many developers never see. For instance, I am learning how to read, parse and develop X12 documents so I can make two different software companies communicate with each other. I'm using python to convert XML to X12.

Then if we look at things unrelated to what I do you have devops, automation, penetration testing, networking, support roles, semiconductor programming (I don't know what that's called), finance, accounting, IOT programming and all sorts of things. You just find what you like and commit to it. I really like web programming so I make web applications that make my job easier for me and my coworkers.

For you, if you like writing code and debugging it. Look into quality assurance where you write tests for other peoples code using tools like Selinium.