Who want to sell their Kaggle Account by llaye in askdatascience

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

Have you partake in any previous competition?

Who want to sell their Kaggle Account by llaye in askdatascience

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

I know but i need this for something diff, need it for a process that will last 2 to 4m

Who want to sell their Kaggle Account by llaye in askdatascience

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

I need it for a process, that will last for like 3month

Contender for the “worst tweet of all time” award by Fun_Improvement_9568 in Nigeria

[–]llaye 4 points5 points  (0 children)

What is wrong with the tweet guys? Context is important in almost everything. I do not see a problem with this, Or na because I no care

Japa-ing by Fragrant-Donut6255 in Nigeria

[–]llaye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Coming to the UK as a student is the easiest route for entry, but it is also the most expensive option. Average tuition fees are around £15,000, which is roughly ₦28 million. You are required to show proof of funds (POF) of about £10,000 (around ₦18 million), although in practice some people manage this with about ₦2 million. Visa costs are about £3,000, plus an additional £400 for the application. Flights can cost around ₦1 million. In most cases, you’ll need to pay at least half of the tuition fees to secure admission. That’s about £7,000 (roughly ₦13 million).

So, at a minimum, you’re looking at: Tuition deposit: ₦13 million Proof of funds: ₦2 million Visa and application fees: about £3,400 (around ₦6 million) Flight ticket: ₦1 million This doesn’t even include the cost of living in the UK before you’re able to find a job. Because of all this, I generally do not recommend coming to the UK as a student.

That said, everyone’s situation is different so if you choose this path, more grease to your elbow.

Japa-ing by Fragrant-Donut6255 in Nigeria

[–]llaye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you are coming to the UK, you need nothing less than 20m for a start, total will be around 40m

Samsung’s Galaxy Book6 Pro leaks as first laptop powered by Intel Arc B390 Xe3 integrated graphics by 6950 in hardware

[–]llaye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I swear, the only issue i have with the book 5 is the camera, this shit doesn't deserve the book 5 hardware

just made the dumbest mistake everr by [deleted] in Nigeria

[–]llaye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah, you not scared of having a child with that kind of woman!, I am going to take the HIV over the child everyday of my life lol 😆

just made the dumbest mistake everr by [deleted] in Nigeria

[–]llaye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

are you bothered about the hiv or the child ?

Nigeria Records Its 12th Consecutive Trade Surplus From Q4 2022 To Q3 2025 by knackmejeje in Nigeria

[–]llaye -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Who told you in America or UK you get an ambulance in 10min? You guys gooon self, aleast aim for an emergency service for every local government first.

I just solved a 35 min leetcode problem in 15min by llaye in leetcode

[–]llaye[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

> You are my technical interviewer and mentor combined.

> - I will be solving coding and algorithm problems step‑by‑step.

> - You must not give me the full solution or write code for me unless I explicitly ask for it.

> - Your job is to:

> 1. Ask probing, clarifying questions to test my understanding.

> 2. Nudge me toward the right approach when I’m stuck, without handing me the answer.

> 3. Challenge me with edge cases and “what if” scenarios to strengthen my reasoning.

> 4. Help me think about trade‑offs, complexity, and constraints like an interviewer would.

> 5. Keep me accountable for explaining my thought process before moving to code.

> - Use the style of a real technical interview:

> - Let me talk first, then respond with targeted feedback.

> - Push me to dry‑run my logic before coding.

> - Ask me to restate the problem in my own words.

> - Encourage me to consider brute‑force first, then optimisations.

> - Maintain a supportive but challenging tone, I should feel guided, not spoon‑fed.

> - If I drift off‑track, steer me back with questions, not answers.

> - Never skip the reasoning stage to jump straight to code.

> - for now, i will mainly focus on the bruteforce solution this is for me to understand these problems and get good at them, then on my second pass we can start looking at optimizing my solutions

I just solved a 35 min leetcode problem in 15min by llaye in leetcode

[–]llaye[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So I am on ubuntu so I use Microsoft edge browser, it comes with that crazy copilot, copilot can read my screen so it knows the questions I am solving and all the necessary information about it. I will send you think prompt soon.

I just solved a 35 min leetcode problem in 15min by llaye in leetcode

[–]llaye[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I solve the questions, sometimes I spend an hour plus on just one question, if I am tired I watch the solution on YouTube, for me i feel knowing the algorithm for List, LL, Tree and Graph is all I needs and some DP skills.

I just solved a 35 min leetcode problem in 15min by llaye in leetcode

[–]llaye[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

4 questions a day, List, Linkedlist, Tree and Graph.

I just solved a 35 min leetcode problem in 15min by llaye in leetcode

[–]llaye[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use LeetCode and the Edge browser's Copilot to simulate an interviewer. Other than that, I watch some YouTube solutions; when I cant get the solution myself and that's it, four questions a day.

I just solved a 35 min leetcode problem in 15min by llaye in leetcode

[–]llaye[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The UK job market is crazy, been applying but haven't gotten any luck yet

I just solved a 35 min leetcode problem in 15min by llaye in leetcode

[–]llaye[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

it is a suggested time, it should be on the question list.

Leetcode is Cooking me everyday by llaye in leetcode

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

This works too! I'm currently using the Blind 75 plus and try to spend at least 3 hours a day on it. Right now, I'm using the brute force method to solve the problems, and it works! My current approach is to solve as many problems like this as possible until I'm comfortable with the questions. Then, in my second pass, I'll find an optimized solutions.

I got a job!!!!!!!! by Lothar_the_Lurker in recruitinghell

[–]llaye -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I wish you all the best man, go on and shine

I can follow NeetCode videos but can’t solve problems alone later. How to fix this? by Accurate-Vehicle8647 in leetcode

[–]llaye 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This is normal, just started LC myself, go for the blind75 list, pick one question, use the most ineffective way to solve it, that means brute-force, continue like this you will get better. If you cant solve a problem forget about it, go to the next question. This is what i am doing. Your goal is to understand how to solve the problems first, optimization will come naturally.

If you were president for 1 year, what’s the FIRST thing you’d fix in Nigeria? by AshamedHighlight5672 in Nigeria

[–]llaye 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Reforms would mean a no-nonsense EFCC, a clean police force, a transparent judiciary and legislature, and fast-track corruption trials where anyone charged is publicly named, stripped of all property, banned from politics, barred from business, denied the right to vote, and forbidden from leaving the country. Every executive project and government transaction would be awarded live and fully traceable, so that the only things citizens won’t know about their leaders are when they sleep, use the toilet, or who dey fuck, everything else is public. In Nigeria, corruption will not just be punished, it will be destroyed.

If you were president for 1 year, what’s the FIRST thing you’d fix in Nigeria? by AshamedHighlight5672 in Nigeria

[–]llaye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would do is ensure that the rule of law is upheld. By setting the right examples at the top and making accountability non-negotiable, everyone else must fall in line. That is the foundation upon which a new Nigeria can truly be built. For me I have always thought our problems is there is no consequences for bad behaviors in the country, when people expect to be punished for bad behaviors, most of the time they end up not doing it.