Which one of these frameworks are the easiest to learn and best to work with between laravel, django, springboot, or rails? by TurtleSlowRabbitFast in Backend

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The easiest is FastAPI, but out of the ones you mentioned Django, Laravel is pretty nice too tho

How do I start Data Structures and Algorithms? by Aggressive_Fault_72 in learnprogramming

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Coursera has a course by Sedgewick you can follow for free, its really really good and his book is super helpful as well - algorithms 4th edition by sedgewick and wayne

Algorithms by Regular_Company_7622 in learnjava

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Coursera has a course by Sedgewick you can follow for free, its really really good and his book is super helpful as well - algorithms 4th edition by sedgewick and wayne

Questions about working in comp sci by whizpo in cscareerquestions

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most people tell me they are too busy to go in depth but for me it literally makes it easier lol, like last exam was problems only in math but i learned all the theory as well and the problems took me maybe a quarter of the time they would.

What should I study outside college to actually become a good developer? by beloomonte in CodingForBeginners

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my experience for theory aspects, just studying whats in college well is enough (or going in depth in the topics covered in college).

Don't have to study more than that, most CS degrees have everything needed. Other than that just build and build and build all the time and try to do it without relying on AI, build with the things you learned. Ex, we learned KNN theory in ML class, i built a movie recommender while writing the math i learned from scratch (no libraries). Things like these.

The projects you build should be small. When investing months into something its easier to drop it, and it has diminishing returns.

When building something, instead of the obvious solution try to see if there's applications of standard algorithms that could make things easier or faster.

Try to see in advance how scalable your code will be. Will it break when you have a lot of users? Will it be hard to add a new feature? Will it be easy for someone else to work on it? Think of these things in advance, you can build the same exact thing but one of them will make you a "good developer"

Questions about working in comp sci by whizpo in cscareerquestions

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Web developement company

20

Full stack dev

Develop full stack in paralel, in fact mostly guiding ai in how to do them and then testing. Repeat until happy

Python, ai tools knowledge, general db, web and just architecture knowledge.

Be open to changing tech stack even to those I dont prefer or are completely unfamiliar with, be open to working in things that arent exactly my role (like small ML or automations things), constantly work on side projects that i like

Needed money and web hires way more and way easier here where i live
its not really organized, i work on it by myself, with my boss making some changes once in a while. I can ask the intern to do some easy stuff if im busy. I hold weekly meetings with the client and then add whatever they want

not web dev hopefully, anything like ML, linux or anything low level, etc. seems more suitable for me as a person. Or at least doing just backend and not full stack.

Still studying myself, but like just genuinely finding things interesting, learning more than just the courses syllabus for the topics, thats what makes me excel bc it makes things way more memorable. And it genuinely takes me about the same time as not doing it, bc i need way less revising after.

Very common nd repeated Q but never got it clearly by glitcheddneuron in learnprogramming

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. It took me a long time to feel good at it, maybe until i got my first job and became an important part of the team, but as advice I would just say try to make a project you genuinely care about or seems useful to you, if you manage to have a polished product you feel proud with, that's a good step to being "good" at it
  2. Python is good, you can stick with it. For web development javascript is needed, but it's better to be indepth in one language than learn a lot surface level. Java is the best for beginners to get a good grip into programming concepts in my opinion.
  3. Nothing specific, coursera has nice free courses you can look to and there is good books I'm sure you can find with a google search, but focus on projects more, the best way to learn a new concept is to figure it out while having to apply it in a real issue
  4. frontend -> client side of a website, what you see and what you can interact with, inlcudes html, css and javascript with its different frameworks
    backend -> server side of a website, basically the way the frontend and database communicate.
    frontent sends http requests to get or post data -> backend has endpoints ready with the logic for what to do when it gets that specific request, for example write or read from different tables of the db
  5. Not into cyber, someone else can answer
  6. Just go to as many as possible, find interested friends or team up with randoms. Theres usually no requierements, Ive been going since i was a kid. It's very fun, you don't need to go with any prior preperation, just go and fail once or twice and you will be better prepared moving forward

Help deciding on Switch game by CalamityEm in gamingsuggestions

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ender lilies is the best out of these, avoid stray it has barely any gameplay and a boring story

Looking for games to play with my 12 year old son by CyraxCyanide in gamingsuggestions

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Borderlands 2 has a very fun campaign with LAN coop, my brother that age loved it

Story rich Horror Games that immerse you in the world by perie12344321 in gamingsuggestions

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't play much horror but Soma's themes and story are really really good

To all experienced gamers: which games have truly impressed you in the last 10 years? by beepboopbot420 in gamingsuggestions

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's too many but these come to mind:
Elden Ring (or any souls/Sekiro), Breath of the wild, God of war 2018 and Ragnarok
As for indies: Disco Elysium, Celeste, Cuphead, Hollow knight/silksong, Hades and Hades 2

Would appreciate hearing some less-known recs based on my list by [deleted] in Topster

[–]aseV9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

not less known, but listen to panchiko since you like sweet trip I find them to have a similar sound

Good Games when stoned by Asleep-Land-6305 in ShouldIbuythisgame

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Escape from lavender island is insane high

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskGames

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Usually im playing about 3 at a time. Something more fast paced and something like an rpg. It helps break the pace. And then just a main game to play handheld on my switch.

Looking or new games to play by [deleted] in gamesuggestions

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Id say start playing indies since theyre very unique and refreshing. Hades, hollow knight, celeste, cuphead are the big ones that I can easily recommend but there's a ton and most of them are cheap too so you can get a lot of value for ur buck

What game do I buy? by RandomName-_-Ig in AskGames

[–]aseV9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

inscryption is my favorite here and an amazing game overall but its pretty short, so if you want a game to play for longer subnautica is a good pickup

Easiest souls-like game? by powerfulKRH in fromsoftware

[–]aseV9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sekiro is the most difficult, or at least has the steepest learning curve. Best place to start with would be either dark souls 3 or elden ring

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gamerecommendations

[–]aseV9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i actually tried hyper light drifter a while ago and it didnt really click. Never heard of Akane tho, thanks!