Me too until I got further and got syntax errors. While fixing one, messed up something else. This was back in the early 1990's. I think programing is much easier today with better tools and debuggers back then. My first programing language was Visual Basic (VB).
@Xeno The Strange not always. For a multithreaded program where you explicitly put locks on resources you can have deadlock if you’re not careful. Most compilers and OS do try to mitigate this though.
As a math teacher, here's a free lesson: there's NEVER dumb questions. The only way to knowledge, are mistakes. Not knowing something it's a must in order to learn. Keep it up! 🇲🇽
@shalki parkash you don't want to know hahahahaha. Honestly, it's like a bunch of mathematical statements that you need to proof with all kinds of rules and theorems. I hated the course with all my heart XD
@shalki parkash its math for programming, like you know the maths you knew but this times its singled out topics that we can use along the way(programming)
Love this. I was never the smartest CS student during my undergrad but consistently trying and networking pays off! I’m now a SW Engineer down in Florida!
Can you guys help me? I kinda suck at math. But I want to be a programmer. Do you think I can do good at CS if I get into a bad college by practicing? Cause my grades aren’t high to get into a good college.
@@1sraQ tbh i would say that programming does not necessarily require you to be super strong in math. it just depends on what branch of CS you're trying to get into. and sure bro! practice makes perfect and, if you're willing to put in the work, bad grades won't stop you
I'm a high school student who recently got into competitive programming, and I'm complete sh*t at it. I lose hope from time to time seeing other extraterrestrially super-intelligent coders out there who can just take a look at any problem for a sec and solve them in minutes. But you sir, are a real inspiration. This video gave me a sudden confidence boost and the motivation to keep pushing. I shall persevere. Hopefully, I'll be able to snatch that admission into Innopolis.
Just as a heads-up solving these Problems is almost only training so if you just train enough you will probably get pretty good. Coding isnt really difficult it may just take a bit of time to click so if your start is slow its really not a big deal.
The fact that you’re doing coding in high school already puts you ahead of your future competition. Don’t give up and you’ll be very employable by the time you graduate college. Keep it up!
@@MegaDisc0933 Judging by his name, I'm pretty sure, that the majority of the students in his country are involved with programming and coding from earlier stages of high school. That's the problem. The competition is too stiff in some parts of the world.
I took my first college programming course this last semester as a senior in high school and ended with a B (mostly bc I didn’t understand how to calculate the different times that algorithms take to run) but I’m going to keep going because coding truly does feel like a superpower and it’s really rewarding when you finally get your code to work 😭 *tears of joy*
"sucks at math" "forgets basic stuff" "friends don't give a fuck" Holy shit I thought I was the only one, lmao. You inspired me, my man. Keep up the good work
Ah yes, we studied this in Operating Systems. Deadlock occurs when processes cannot get the resource they need because they are waiting to use a resource another process is currently holding that is also waiting on another process holding the resource it needs as well. Processes are left in an infinite cycle of waiting on the other and so forth with no progress being made because all processes do not have access to the resource they need.
going to uni for comp sci, and took a few classes for it in hs. I was always around people who could code circles around me. So glad I can see someone with a kind of relatable experience with me.
I was in the workforce 3 years and now I’m getting out of it and taking trigonometry and a Java class. Hearing about how you were just as confused gives me a ton of hope.
I took a breath-first approach and tried to absorb as many different concepts as i can instead of going very deep into one, so even though i dived into those, I don't have very deep knowledge in them. I feel like this approach worked well for me, as I was able to relate different concepts with each other and have easier time coming up with new ideas
As someone who’s just starting High School after this summer and want to major into CS, these type of videos make me really excited to learn these things and start my career! Awesome video!
Yo an actual tip from a cs major student, learn a couple programming languages while you're at high-school, trust me, I wish I had learned c++, python and Java earlier.
This is actually inspirational. I'm in Uni studying something completely unrelated to computer science but watching this gave me some confidence to try it out some day.
Right? I am also studying something completely unrelated to computer science, but while I am procrastinating doing my actual university work by watching RUclips I immediately feel the urge to learn programming, learn playing the violin/piano and start working out. Then I start the next video and by the end of the day I didn't get anything done. :( I think I will get the hang of it someday though.
CS has a high hiring demand which is cool too. I tried minoring in it for a bit but then I realized I just want to learn how to code which can be done by online courses and using google while doing CS in college includes gaining a deeper understanding of how coding works which is a lot of work
@Vanshika Gupta Oh sure. It looks scary, but I found it relatively easy. Basically it's logic. "If A implies B and if B and notA implies C, can we say that A implies C ?" See it more as a mental puzzle than math.
@Vanshika Gupta Sure no problem. Of you have other questions, you can ask them on Pan's discord server. Lots of people there in the field who can provide their own story and view on stuff.
Damn!!!!!! This was relatable AF...I just completed my first year of college in an Indian university (CS major)...I have my summer break of 8 weeks right now, and I expect myself to watch kdramas the whole freaking time!!!!!!
My year first quarter was like: I don't know anything about cs, wtf is binary, wtf is parseInt, wtf is javascript, wtf is html, wtf is anything related to cs. Second quarter I took a intro to python, thank god it was truly an intro compare to the other class I took during my first quarter. Third quarter intro to python classes. Took an unpaid internship to learn about mobile dev, learned github and more front end dev. Truly amazing how much you can learn and get better at what you are doing the more you do it.
How to reverse a linked list? easy 1. add every element to an array 2. make a second array 3. for loop that reverses the direction of first array and puts everything into second array 4. make a second linked list with items from second array. ( also I don't know what a linked is tbh lol )
This is actually super relatable. My first interview question I got was reverse a linked list and I literally put all the elements in an array and used .reverse() method on it and looped back thru and put the values back in the linked list LOL. Safe to say I didn’t get the offer, but ever since then I DRILLED reverse linked list.
"As soon as I learned how to print hello world, I felt the power in my hand." same bro to the point that I suddenly vision myself as the next iron man lol haha
You deserve my absolute respect dude. As I joined my first class of computer science last Monday I couldn't feel the floor under my toes. And I also suck at math so. That was encouraging. Thanks
"You should have learned that in high school, I'm not going over it again" means the instructor is generally lazy other than teaching their own courses. When I heard that, I usually went to the math tutoring services they offer for free (usually done by Math majors or people who have chosen to take a Math minor).
@@yungosu5786 Because humans often forget things and a quick refresher is what a good teacher would give. What's more important: a few minutes of time to go over something from highschool or a student who doesn't fall behind because he's stuck on something else? Not to mention it just makes for a better teacher-student relationship which benefits everyone.
Explaining prerequisite theories in a module is seldomly about whether or not the prof has the patience to explain it, but often about how much time the professor has to go through the syllabus. Remember that academics is a track of courses and a professor’s time and attention doesnt and cannot(for practical reasons) revolve around the pace of just one student. Though, i gotta say that there must be a kinder more constructive reponse than that.
Nah, it means he’s not responsible for teaching you prerequisite material and has limited time to go over what he actually has to teach, so he can’t waste time on review. Plus it wastes the time of the other students in the class who are actually prepared. Courses/programs have prerequisites for a reason 🤷🏻♀️
Finding the problem is funny and interesting sometimes because you learn on the way, if it's a personal project. I code for fun so I have no idea about actually working as a programmer, that has to be stressful xD
@@benjamingilardi2304 It's not fun lol, just few days ago I was stuck with a problem for 3 consecutive days and I spent 10+ hours daily trying to solve it. I did solve but those 3 days were like hell. Heck I even thought about it whenever I put my head on the pillow.
Got this recommended while in highschool, I never really had any prior experience in Coding or CS in general and I always procrastinate but seeing this wants me to actually try to atleast start learning a bit
just starting a comp sci major this year. This video is making me much more confident about the process and that if i put the work in and learn a little bit outside of class ill do just fine. thank you
This really empowering me man. Because in my country especially in my home town computer science and computer engineering are still new things. For people like me who didn't have any basic computer whatsoever will crushed by people who had this opportunity to learn computer science since in the high school
5:02 : him being confident for internship. me: took CS in 2018 - 2020 taking netcentric computing in 2020 - 2022 and still feels like im lacking and not ready :')
thanks so much for this man. programming/CS is such a daunting career I want to get into, and with university looming I'm always questioning if I'm smart enough or good enough to even try or if trying to learn about something I know very little of is even worth it. but hey, if you did it, I can do it. Thanks :)
CS student in 4th year here. I felt the same way before college, but still decided to give it try! it's not easy but if you study enough and have lots of patience, you'll do great!! I'm currently on my second internship, with a full-time job lined up after graduation. definitely worth all of the long nights of studying!
@@xpolarzz3241 im a first year anddddd i feel really dumb :(( i can't understand it but I really want to but I have no idea where to continue, I'm just praying I pass the class with a good grade because I'm on a scholarship. Over the winter ima try to relearn java TuT because I really wanna know what I'm doing and I really want to be good :((
I felt that for so long, when i got my first internship, i finally felt like valid and like i could have a career in CS and be able to contribute and stuff. But now i’m applying again and feel dumb all over 😂 and so it goes
@@MichelleB022 3 years ago, fresh out of college, I applied to 50 positions, got 3 interviews, and 2 offers. 45 Didn't even bother to get back to me. last week, I applied to 6 companies, got 5 interviews and 4 offers. Don't lose hope, that first job out of college is by far the hardest to get. The best trait you can show during your interviews is your ability to think about problems and learn from others, because that's all anyone expects from juniors
I was kind of giving up but you somehow inspired me to move on and do well. Thanks. I am 19 and I thought I wasted too much time already and I can't keep going on anymore. Fukc this shit, Imma do this shit.
lol you're 19 bro. I started programming at 25. Spent 6 years in dead ass jobs and on a career I never really liked and ended up dropping out from. I wish I was 19 again like you bro, don't lose this chance.
I learn assembly language of microcontroller and Pascal in university. Now I'm an embedded engineer. I use C language and I do not remember all syntax, but I still do programming. I think I better in hardware than software.
It is kinda reassuring & exciting to know the majority of people who seem to have it together are unsure of themselves. I know shit all & only just began but I hope I’ll make it to this stage where I’m unsure but have knowledge to know how to help myself.
That feeling of finally solving a leetcode problem and then seeing you’re scraping the bottom of the barrel in speed and memory usage is just too real lmao
Crazy how you’re the exact same age as me (I started my CS degree fall 2019) and my university hasn’t taught us the tiniest bit of web dev, UI programming, any of thag
Honestly I always felt my university studies were so worthless at time of really getting into a job, they didn't really teach me anything valuable (I got the job after graduating)
same here. it’s like they expect us to learn all that on our own. ui was very very glossed over and i havent learned any web dev (although there is a class). just got all these like data structures, algos, stupid ass C programs (based around most pointers and mem access).
my university would've been the same, but I went out of my way to research every single course in my CS program and picked out the courses that seemed most practical first so I can put stuff on my resume. since i was a transfer student, i felt like i needed to do as much as i can to not waste more time, so I was motivated to do this kind of research. still, most of the stuff you gotta learn urself but thankfully there are so many resources online.
Great video my guy. I'm about to start my first classes in a cs related major and it's great to see someone who's human and not afraid to talk about the setbacks on the way. Cheers on your future endeavors
I can heavily relate to forgetting how to do mathematics. Luckily I found all my old math books, all the way to grade 6, and reading everything from scratch really helps. Realized that Math is like playing Super Metroid, you have to backtrack often. Now I can easily solve JEE Advance level math problems. (It's a highly tough entrance exam for engineering colleges in India)
I watched your video a year ago when I was just starting with my Prog 1 class and I was honestly lost. Now it appeared in my page again and after one whole year I can say I understand everything you said. Discrete math was a real struggle tho hahaha good luck to yall
@@Alex-bs5sd Yeah, he is Indian (same as me). When people say Asian, they refer to China, Japan, Korea mostly…. rest of Asia is not even considered Asia by westerners for some reason….
This is so relatable right now. I'm currently a BSA 1st year student, wasn't entirely interested in it and I feel so empty since I've wanted to do CS too. So finally, I'm hoping to get accepted to shift for Computer Science. I'm currently learning HTML because I literally don't know where to start but that. I hope I make it. This motivates me a lot, thanks! Haha
This video made me feel a lot better about being bad at math and getting into coding. I’m going into my first year CS in about a week so wish me luck boys 😎👍.
I've been procrastinating learning coding for more than 12 years and I've let my life go on autopilot. Today, I am an ESL teacher and I hate my job, but now that I've watched this , what can I say . Let's do it.
@@FryingPan I'm going through pre-calculus level material just now. I have about a year and a half, maybe 2 years to learn the Maths needed for uni. Anyone who's feeling anxious about their Mathematics, you must be willing to run the gauntlet and put in the time and effort. There no reason why you shouldn't be able to achieve your goals. Learning and understanding Mathematics is akin to running a marathon. It's not just a tedious high school chore. It's a monumental achievement, and you should congratulate yourself for being bold and taking on what many people see as an intellectual beast. Man conquered wild beasts. Why not also intellectual beasts? If that isn't motivation enough for you to learn Maths, and achieve your goals, I won't believe you. 💪🧠
@@gangplank6383 Khan academy saved my life for that part, they have whole sections dedicated to these subjects, that's one thing u could use. I checked my course outlines and pick the khan academy and other yt videos on those subjects and studied that way.
Me: *lack of hope* Me: _understands everything that's said in the video/knows how it works/how to do it_ Me: Me:...huh.... Also Me: I'm still broke af tho lmao.....
Learning how to program a linked list took me half a year or so and I mostly procrastinated, but when I finally understood how the standard code works, I learnt how to reverse a linked list a couple of days after I had learnt to program a linked list.
Dude that's exactly what I did lol. I spent the entire winter break grinding codecademy. Pretty much did all their python courses, except for python for embedded systems. Learned all the major libraries and went into my first cs class like a boss. I almost failed AP CS in high school and if it wasn't for the grinding I did in that winter break, I wouldn't have been a CS major.
@@yellooo3107 Winter break at my university is about 1 month. I go to school in America btw. So I pretty much spent the entire winter break locked up in my room grinding through the all the python courses in codecademy. I was also a student researcher in a lab so the pandas, scipy, and sklearn libraries were very useful to learn.
No joke, after rnging my way through school and not having to do any math for a couple of years I legitimately forgot at the age of 17 which side to substract from which when presented with the minus operator.
"-Is the Sky blue? - May I first Ask if the Ocean is blue?" Is actually very smart and the right thing to ask, considering color is perceived differently on which language you speak. Eg. In Japanese several colors we would think of Green are perceived as a blue. Among closer related languages the differences are smaller of course. (Eg. some hues of yellow are called orange in german)
I'm gonna step in and say this was a interesting linguistic take on this! Good job thinking of a situation where this response is not completely incompetent :D
Bruh from the thumbnail i thought you will say " i am a cs genius,who mastered 10 languages at the age of 5 , i got 5 intership in my 1st year , and i build an app on a calculator" 🤣🤣 didn't see that coming🤣🤣. Instant sub⛈️
Just found this dudes 4 videos, he’s actually really funny, I’m a senior CS major and I’m currently working a crappy IT job and can relate to a lot of his videos
This is cute. I remember my first 2 years of uni (long time ago) and the things I was doing and not doing. It's good to see your ambition and drive to success! I can tell that you're way ahead of the curve among your peers. Definitely you are ahead of where I was then, objectively speaking, of course. You seem to possess a higher level of maturity and goal-oriented mindset not many teens have. Keep it up!
1:05 into the video and I'm like "Yeah, they teach you to reverse a linked list in class using two walkers...but in the real world you will just use a doubly linked list that can be traversed in either direction anyway."
wow this gives me some perspective. I've been coding since I was 7, so.. more than 20 years now, and I've forgotten how much stuff I learned. it must be brutal to cram all that in 4 years.
"As soon as I learned how to print hello world, I felt the power in my hand. "
Me too bro me too
same XD
And then you get to discrete maths..
Laughs in ptsd
I actually printed hello human , I'm self aware now 😂 ......... It was fun
Me too until I got further and got syntax errors. While fixing one, messed up something else. This was back in the early 1990's. I think programing is much easier today with better tools and debuggers back then. My first programing language was Visual Basic (VB).
For anyone wondering: A deadlock is when two (or more) processes are waiting for resources from one another.
@Xeno The Strange not always. For a multithreaded program where you explicitly put locks on resources you can have deadlock if you’re not careful. Most compilers and OS do try to mitigate this though.
Woww thanks a lot man 😭
@Xeno The Strange It generally is. I learned about it in my operating systems class
So its, something that should happen but it's not happening.
@@abhishek3745 It shouldn't happen and it does happen
As a math teacher, here's a free lesson: there's NEVER dumb questions. The only way to knowledge, are mistakes. Not knowing something it's a must in order to learn. Keep it up! 🇲🇽
Teach that to my teacher
@@siddhantrai007 xd
@@siddhantrai007 FR
there are plenty of dumb questions
@@7alimohamedawaad695no there isn’t the people who don’t ask the question because they don’t know the answer are the dumb ones
'I completed 5 hours of the course and spend the rest of my time watching Netflix and anime'
RESPECT!!!!
First ..
For discrete maths, the best answer to any question is "Yes"
Lol
No your answer should be true
@shalki parkash you don't want to know hahahahaha. Honestly, it's like a bunch of mathematical statements that you need to proof with all kinds of rules and theorems. I hated the course with all my heart XD
Lmao
@shalki parkash its math for programming, like you know the maths you knew but this times its singled out topics that we can use along the way(programming)
Love this. I was never the smartest CS student during my undergrad but consistently trying and networking pays off! I’m now a SW Engineer down in Florida!
Hey I’m in Florida and I’m thinking about becoming a SW Engineer how has it been finding a job out here?
^^^ same im a cs student in san antonio, tx and am thinking about moving to florida after graduation
Can you guys help me? I kinda suck at math. But I want to be a programmer. Do you think I can do good at CS if I get into a bad college by practicing? Cause my grades aren’t high to get into a good college.
@@1sraQ tbh i would say that programming does not necessarily require you to be super strong in math. it just depends on what branch of CS you're trying to get into. and sure bro! practice makes perfect and, if you're willing to put in the work, bad grades won't stop you
@@miguelalejandro7045 Does CSE require math? I want to be a software engineer 😓
Thanks for replying. I really appreciate it
we don't call it discrete maths where I'm from, we call it PTSD
Benefits from learning PTSD: Depression, Extreme losses of brain cells and sometimes unexpected seizures.
i signed up for discrete math fall sem thinking it was going to be fun im literally going to cry
@@leftnut7359 well, rip 🪦
so true
Okay my personal PTSD was that maths in which there are partial derivatives and stuff tbh every math was like that to me,lol
I'm a high school student who recently got into competitive programming, and I'm complete sh*t at it. I lose hope from time to time seeing other extraterrestrially super-intelligent coders out there who can just take a look at any problem for a sec and solve them in minutes. But you sir, are a real inspiration. This video gave me a sudden confidence boost and the motivation to keep pushing. I shall persevere. Hopefully, I'll be able to snatch that admission into Innopolis.
Maybe we're not that bad 😂
Just as a heads-up solving these Problems is almost only training so if you just train enough you will probably get pretty good. Coding isnt really difficult it may just take a bit of time to click so if your start is slow its really not a big deal.
being good at competitive programming is usually contingent on being good at contest math
The fact that you’re doing coding in high school already puts you ahead of your future competition. Don’t give up and you’ll be very employable by the time you graduate college. Keep it up!
@@MegaDisc0933 Judging by his name, I'm pretty sure, that the majority of the students in his country are involved with programming and coding from earlier stages of high school. That's the problem. The competition is too stiff in some parts of the world.
I took my first college programming course this last semester as a senior in high school and ended with a B (mostly bc I didn’t understand how to calculate the different times that algorithms take to run) but I’m going to keep going because coding truly does feel like a superpower and it’s really rewarding when you finally get your code to work 😭 *tears of joy*
You mean Time complexity?
how are you doing now !! :D
Interviewer :" what's your strength and weakness"
Me : "sir, my strength is I don't have any weakness and my weakness is I don't have any strength"
👁️👄👁️
👁️👄👁️
perfectly balanced, like everything should be.
perfectly balanced, like everything should be.
epic.
I also felt the power in my hand when I printed "Hello World"
I even planned to choose a sun facing office at Google at that moment
LOLL
sun facing office lmao
lmfao 😂😂😂
That's a good one
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Legit the most honest journey I've ever heard of someone getting into programing! I mean yea this sounds relatable af this is real.
"sucks at math"
"forgets basic stuff"
"friends don't give a fuck"
Holy shit I thought I was the only one, lmao.
You inspired me, my man. Keep up the good work
Find new friends bro, be careful
Imagine having friends
man did u play Patrician iv?
So there's a whole community like me 🌝
Honestly I prefer it when my friends don't give a fuck lol
That way, it feels like there are less eyes on me
Ah yes, we studied this in Operating Systems. Deadlock occurs when processes cannot get the resource they need because they are waiting to use a resource another process is currently holding that is also waiting on another process holding the resource it needs as well. Processes are left in an infinite cycle of waiting on the other and so forth with no progress being made because all processes do not have access to the resource they need.
Damn
Damn if you didn't explained I wouldn't remember at all. I do remember this issue but couldn't really associate with the name for some reason.
it's funny how i actually learnt and understood what you just said in this comment
deadlock can be easily prevented if you only use a single lock in your program.
😄😆😆😂 oh my goodness, thinking about taking up CS, this comment section and this comment tho! I totally get it. I'm excited for CS now!.
going to uni for comp sci, and took a few classes for it in hs. I was always around people who could code circles around me. So glad I can see someone with a kind of relatable experience with me.
the man literally was explaining every problem faced by everyone. But at the end he knew how to reverse a linked list and I still dont
Yo do you know how to do it now ?
When he said he forgot how to divide 5 by 2, I felt that......
/s
Bro gave me some real motivation. Starting cs in second semester after studying business the previous one. Will be a hellll of a journey
“i suck at math”
“val > apex”
man of his words lol
lmaoo
LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL
Val > apex.
Straight fax tho
As soon as i learn how to print "Hello World", i felt power in my hand ... Damn every CS student can relate haha.
I don't even study computer science and I felt it lmao
me picking up a cs book and seeing how to print "hello world" in Java: fk this shit im out
Bruhh...so trueee
I was like i am going to join the FBI when i printed print(""Hello World"")
Print hello world in assembly language
I was in the workforce 3 years and now I’m getting out of it and taking trigonometry and a Java class. Hearing about how you were just as confused gives me a ton of hope.
What you mean getting out are your learning to program to switch careers if that so you're still going to be in the workforce
"I sucked at math"
*Gives hope*
*Remembers he's Asian*
*Loses hope*
Lol
Lmaooo
Im Asian and i suck at maths too. 🤣🤣
@@pranikashrestha3416 me too 😭
@@pranikashrestha3416 wanna learn??
so he started learning cs a year ago and already dived into data science and AI, I am impressed bro!
I took a breath-first approach and tried to absorb as many different concepts as i can instead of going very deep into one, so even though i dived into those, I don't have very deep knowledge in them. I feel like this approach worked well for me, as I was able to relate different concepts with each other and have easier time coming up with new ideas
@@FryingPan you did a very great job. Keep it up and you will success in the field
@@soksamnang2150 I am in grade 9 and I want to go into CS as a career, anything I should learn, Im trying to go into front end.
@@specificpotato9024 just do it, a ton of resources online.
@@FryingPan sounds interesting might try doing the same thing
As someone who’s just starting High School after this summer and want to major into CS, these type of videos make me really excited to learn these things and start my career! Awesome video!
You should be excited ofc! This year is my last year as a high schooler and CS is the only class I had fun learning.
That’s good that your finding out your interests at a young age. Hopefully u can get as best prepared as u can for whichever career u aim for.
Yo an actual tip from a cs major student, learn a couple programming languages while you're at high-school, trust me, I wish I had learned c++, python and Java earlier.
ohh youth.....
@@maevadim4548 I second this, it's a big help if you already know even the basics.
This is actually inspirational. I'm in Uni studying something completely unrelated to computer science but watching this gave me some confidence to try it out some day.
Right? I am also studying something completely unrelated to computer science, but while I am procrastinating doing my actual university work by watching RUclips I immediately feel the urge to learn programming, learn playing the violin/piano and start working out. Then I start the next video and by the end of the day I didn't get anything done. :(
I think I will get the hang of it someday though.
was it electrical? fuck I hate this course so much
CS has a high hiring demand which is cool too. I tried minoring in it for a bit but then I realized I just want to learn how to code which can be done by online courses and using google while doing CS in college includes gaining a deeper understanding of how coding works which is a lot of work
I am a math major and tried transferring to cs but they rejected me L
Right my first option was computer science, and I changed it to sociology
I’m on my first semester and this video really inspired and eased my stress, your storytelling is hilarious 😂👏
Same here😅
the part when you said "as soon as I print hello world I felt the power in my hand" I literally died :')
Funny enough, it's almost word to work how uncle bob describes the moment he knew he wanted to be a programmer.
it sadly it's true we all are like that when we learn how to do it lol
True tho
Not literally
Really literally?
As someone who's been working as a programmer for 4.5 years, this videos scares me...subbed :)
@ADAM RAY I don't remember for sure
@Vanshika Gupta Oh sure. It looks scary, but I found it relatively easy. Basically it's logic. "If A implies B and if B and notA implies C, can we say that A implies C ?"
See it more as a mental puzzle than math.
@Vanshika Gupta Sure no problem. Of you have other questions, you can ask them on Pan's discord server. Lots of people there in the field who can provide their own story and view on stuff.
@ADAM RAY cuz he still dont know how to reverse a linked list ig
Damn!!!!!! This was relatable AF...I just completed my first year of college in an Indian university (CS major)...I have my summer break of 8 weeks right now, and I expect myself to watch kdramas the whole freaking time!!!!!!
"Netflix and Anime" wow I really felt that one
😂😭😭
Dorohedoro
"Annie"me
This is how a topper talks when you ask him:"did you study?"
true
@Home Banger *KONO DIO GHARE*
@Home Banger देवघरे
@Home Banger do-lawre-lag-gye
@@hrishikeshdeoghare4359 देवघरे deoghare नही होता बल्कि devghare या devaghare होता है।
As someone who has also forgotten way too much math, this is comforting as I'll have to relaern it too. Thanks for making this.
My year first quarter was like: I don't know anything about cs, wtf is binary, wtf is parseInt, wtf is javascript, wtf is html, wtf is anything related to cs. Second quarter I took a intro to python, thank god it was truly an intro compare to the other class I took during my first quarter. Third quarter intro to python classes. Took an unpaid internship to learn about mobile dev, learned github and more front end dev. Truly amazing how much you can learn and get better at what you are doing the more you do it.
Damn the quality of content is real good.
Like he's really funny, he's editing is awesome, he comic timing is incredible.
How to reverse a linked list? easy
1. add every element to an array
2. make a second array
3. for loop that reverses the direction of first array and puts everything into second array
4. make a second linked list with items from second array.
( also I don't know what a linked is tbh lol )
It is actually a list "linked" with pointers, and we need to reverse usually those pointers:
A-> B-> C
Should become:
A
Yet it also depends, if you want to make it destructive/non-destructive, this version is destructive, the idea you have is non-destructive
This is actually super relatable. My first interview question I got was reverse a linked list and I literally put all the elements in an array and used .reverse() method on it and looped back thru and put the values back in the linked list LOL. Safe to say I didn’t get the offer, but ever since then I DRILLED reverse linked list.
Wait can u give me a short example of how you use the .reverse() method. I am first year and currently learning o.0 if you dont mind
@@tsukkyhime Collection framework reverse() method
yeah, but like also, this seems legit to me HAHAH
Yeah the "hello world" part is pretty accurate ngl. It instantly made me feel like I could hack everything.
Great work! love your content. Keep it up!😊
I’m vibing so hard with this dude it’s insane. Grab a dorm room with me when doing masters in a non gay way obv
dude why would you say that last part?? it wasn't weird until then lmao
@@gotemlearning no need to deny it ;)
Concordia masters?
Why are u gay
dudes so homophobic he had to make it public
"As soon as I learned how to print hello world, I felt the power in my hand."
same bro to the point that I suddenly vision myself as the next iron man lol haha
You deserve my absolute respect dude. As I joined my first class of computer science last Monday I couldn't feel the floor under my toes. And I also suck at math so. That was encouraging. Thanks
How are you doing in computer science now?
How’s it going
@@erenarikan_He dropped out
I’m surprised how you manage to learn all that in a short amount of time.
🤟🏻”the will is the power to succeed”
"You should have learned that in high school, I'm not going over it again" means the instructor is generally lazy other than teaching their own courses. When I heard that, I usually went to the math tutoring services they offer for free (usually done by Math majors or people who have chosen to take a Math minor).
No, when they say "You should have learned that in high school, I'm not going over it again," it means they also forgot what it is.
It means if you buying their courses - you should know the school program, why they should spend time to teach you how to 2+2?
@@yungosu5786 Because humans often forget things and a quick refresher is what a good teacher would give. What's more important: a few minutes of time to go over something from highschool or a student who doesn't fall behind because he's stuck on something else? Not to mention it just makes for a better teacher-student relationship which benefits everyone.
Explaining prerequisite theories in a module is seldomly about whether or not the prof has the patience to explain it, but often about how much time the professor has to go through the syllabus. Remember that academics is a track of courses and a professor’s time and attention doesnt and cannot(for practical reasons) revolve around the pace of just one student. Though, i gotta say that there must be a kinder more constructive reponse than that.
Nah, it means he’s not responsible for teaching you prerequisite material and has limited time to go over what he actually has to teach, so he can’t waste time on review. Plus it wastes the time of the other students in the class who are actually prepared. Courses/programs have prerequisites for a reason 🤷🏻♀️
You make learning so fun to watch. Really appreciate the videos
Man I wanna have nothing to do with coding. Can't imagine trying to solve a problem when I don't even know what the source of the problem is.
Stay safe
Finding the problem is funny and interesting sometimes because you learn on the way, if it's a personal project. I code for fun so I have no idea about actually working as a programmer, that has to be stressful xD
@@benjamingilardi2304 It's not fun lol, just few days ago I was stuck with a problem for 3 consecutive days and I spent 10+ hours daily trying to solve it. I did solve but those 3 days were like hell. Heck I even thought about it whenever I put my head on the pillow.
As a coder I can tell you that the problem is always people. That's why we don't like people, but we have to solve their problems.
Teacher: Yeah you should have already learned that in your previous…
Everyone: *Felt That*
Got this recommended while in highschool, I never really had any prior experience in Coding or CS in general and I always procrastinate but seeing this wants me to actually try to atleast start learning a bit
just starting a comp sci major this year. This video is making me much more confident about the process and that if i put the work in and learn a little bit outside of class ill do just fine. thank you
This really empowering me man. Because in my country especially in my home town computer science and computer engineering are still new things. For people like me who didn't have any basic computer whatsoever will crushed by people who had this opportunity to learn computer science since in the high school
i feel that too
going to subscribe very nice it's my first time on your channel , and what a humor .
As a cs student who finished her 3rd year of college and currently doing 2nd internship, I feel all your struggles and share your pain my brother 😂
Help me to get internship 😭
a türk buldum hangi ünidesin
@@trmiraculouslb bilkent
@@torus151 did you find one?
@@IremTekin oha sifir saka ayni unideyiz beklemiyordum hic, bölümüm ctis ama olsun
5:02 : him being confident for internship.
me:
took CS in 2018 - 2020
taking netcentric computing in 2020 - 2022
and still feels like im lacking and not ready :')
thanks so much for this man. programming/CS is such a daunting career I want to get into, and with university looming I'm always questioning if I'm smart enough or good enough to even try or if trying to learn about something I know very little of is even worth it. but hey, if you did it, I can do it. Thanks :)
CS student in 4th year here. I felt the same way before college, but still decided to give it try! it's not easy but if you study enough and have lots of patience, you'll do great!! I'm currently on my second internship, with a full-time job lined up after graduation. definitely worth all of the long nights of studying!
@@xpolarzz3241 im a first year anddddd i feel really dumb :(( i can't understand it but I really want to but I have no idea where to continue, I'm just praying I pass the class with a good grade because I'm on a scholarship. Over the winter ima try to relearn java TuT because I really wanna know what I'm doing and I really want to be good :((
I felt that for so long, when i got my first internship, i finally felt like valid and like i could have a career in CS and be able to contribute and stuff. But now i’m applying again and feel dumb all over 😂 and so it goes
@@MichelleB022 3 years ago, fresh out of college, I applied to 50 positions, got 3 interviews, and 2 offers. 45 Didn't even bother to get back to me. last week, I applied to 6 companies, got 5 interviews and 4 offers. Don't lose hope, that first job out of college is by far the hardest to get. The best trait you can show during your interviews is your ability to think about problems and learn from others, because that's all anyone expects from juniors
I was kind of giving up but you somehow inspired me to move on and do well. Thanks. I am 19 and I thought I wasted too much time already and I can't keep going on anymore. Fukc this shit, Imma do this shit.
you are only 19, you have the world in your hands! i started coding later than you, just work hard and believe in the process, you got this sht
lol you're 19 bro. I started programming at 25. Spent 6 years in dead ass jobs and on a career I never really liked and ended up dropping out from. I wish I was 19 again like you bro, don't lose this chance.
@@FryingPan I'll do my best. Trusting the process.
@@Morquioo ayee I am glad and hope you are in a better job. Better late than never. I won't give up now. Thanks
this year is my first year in uni, i am also 19 and study cs, i have the same feeling as you.
Being in Computer Science Major, this is the first Computer Science based Channel I dared to subscribe, coz I see me in u bruh!
0:41 - Techlead is such a meme, I can't help but feel bad for him (as a non-millionaire, non-ex Googler/Facebooker)
I learn assembly language of microcontroller and Pascal in university. Now I'm an embedded engineer. I use C language and I do not remember all syntax, but I still do programming. I think I better in hardware than software.
This boosted my confidence thankyou!
That interviewer's laugh really made my day, thankyou
It is kinda reassuring & exciting to know the majority of people who seem to have it together are unsure of themselves. I know shit all & only just began but I hope I’ll make it to this stage where I’m unsure but have knowledge to know how to help myself.
Dude... You r more of a comedian man. I laughed through the entire video. Am just starting CS and I'ld say that you motivated me man. Thanks...
That feeling of finally solving a leetcode problem and then seeing you’re scraping the bottom of the barrel in speed and memory usage is just too real lmao
Crazy how you’re the exact same age as me (I started my CS degree fall 2019) and my university hasn’t taught us the tiniest bit of web dev, UI programming, any of thag
Thank you, I thought it was just me.
Honestly I always felt my university studies were so worthless at time of really getting into a job, they didn't really teach me anything valuable (I got the job after graduating)
same i just joined college this year, ngl learnt all web dev by myself, teaching sucks ass ngl
same here. it’s like they expect us to learn all that on our own. ui was very very glossed over and i havent learned any web dev (although there is a class). just got all these like data structures, algos, stupid ass C programs (based around most pointers and mem access).
my university would've been the same, but I went out of my way to research every single course in my CS program and picked out the courses that seemed most practical first so I can put stuff on my resume. since i was a transfer student, i felt like i needed to do as much as i can to not waste more time, so I was motivated to do this kind of research. still, most of the stuff you gotta learn urself but thankfully there are so many resources online.
its good video its normal to not be perfect and with hard work u will excel
Great video my guy. I'm about to start my first classes in a cs related major and it's great to see someone who's human and not afraid to talk about the setbacks on the way. Cheers on your future endeavors
Thanks and good luck! :)
I can heavily relate to forgetting how to do mathematics. Luckily I found all my old math books, all the way to grade 6, and reading everything from scratch really helps. Realized that Math is like playing Super Metroid, you have to backtrack often.
Now I can easily solve JEE Advance level math problems. (It's a highly tough entrance exam for engineering colleges in India)
Which college you're in bro?
I watched your video a year ago when I was just starting with my Prog 1 class and I was honestly lost. Now it appeared in my page again and after one whole year I can say I understand everything you said. Discrete math was a real struggle tho hahaha good luck to yall
Do you need to be smart in math?
@@softie1109if you a women automatically no
when an Asian says "I suck at maths"
it means they couldn't top the national exam in maths and ended up coming 2nd.
You are Asian too. Judging by your name
@@Alex-bs5sd Yeah, he is Indian (same as me). When people say Asian, they refer to China, Japan, Korea mostly…. rest of Asia is not even considered Asia by westerners for some reason….
@@aozora_2k frrr I'm turkish and we're most of the time not even included in the picture
@@sn0wfa11s Turkish is European
@@Alex-bs5sd are you sure you know geography? I'm Turkish, I would know these things about my ppl.
This is so inspiring, this is proof it’s never too late to start coding
This is so relatable right now. I'm currently a BSA 1st year student, wasn't entirely interested in it and I feel so empty since I've wanted to do CS too. So finally, I'm hoping to get accepted to shift for Computer Science. I'm currently learning HTML because I literally don't know where to start but that. I hope I make it. This motivates me a lot, thanks! Haha
Proud of you man, keep it up!
Accomplishing "hello world" was a triumph when I had a C++ subject during my 1st yr college.
It was actually fun watching this video. Nice job
this was mad funny, just subbed
The part where he asked his professor a basic trig question and he tells him that's basic high school shit is so real it hurts.
Thanks, Your Journey is very dedicated, and deciplaned in this hard work you have got a job is definate
This video made me feel a lot better about being bad at math and getting into coding. I’m going into my first year CS in about a week so wish me luck boys 😎👍.
I’m crap at math too, but CS is what I’m gonna go to college for… I’ve also been programming for like 10 years tho lol good luck bro…
Hows it going
Would love to hear an update!!
I've been procrastinating learning coding for more than 12 years and I've let my life go on autopilot. Today, I am an ESL teacher and I hate my job, but now that I've watched this , what can I say . Let's do it.
Gl
I've watched this video about 5 times throughout the year as a first year CS major, and I finally understand everything this dude is talking about.
Did anyone catch the part where he was talking about his "math restudy journey"
Cuz I didn't and I need jt
that was hell, imagine re-learning what derivatives and matrices are cause u didn't pay attention the first time u learned it 😞
@@FryingPan I'm going through pre-calculus level material just now. I have about a year and a half, maybe 2 years to learn the Maths needed for uni.
Anyone who's feeling anxious about their Mathematics, you must be willing to run the gauntlet and put in the time and effort. There no reason why you shouldn't be able to achieve your goals.
Learning and understanding Mathematics is akin to running a marathon. It's not just a tedious high school chore. It's a monumental achievement, and you should congratulate yourself for being bold and taking on what many people see as an intellectual beast. Man conquered wild beasts. Why not also intellectual beasts?
If that isn't motivation enough for you to learn Maths, and achieve your goals, I won't believe you. 💪🧠
@@FryingPan I'm literally Living it rn and I feel lost about where to start
@@gangplank6383 Khan academy saved my life for that part, they have whole sections dedicated to these subjects, that's one thing u could use. I checked my course outlines and pick the khan academy and other yt videos on those subjects and studied that way.
@@FryingPan tmrw going to learn matrices 😂 I will pay attention
Me: *lack of hope*
Me: _understands everything that's said in the video/knows how it works/how to do it_
Me:
Me:...huh....
Also Me: I'm still broke af tho lmao.....
Learning how to program a linked list took me half a year or so and I mostly procrastinated, but when I finally understood how the standard code works, I learnt how to reverse a linked list a couple of days after I had learnt to program a linked list.
Dude that's exactly what I did lol. I spent the entire winter break grinding codecademy. Pretty much did all their python courses, except for python for embedded systems. Learned all the major libraries and went into my first cs class like a boss. I almost failed AP CS in high school and if it wasn't for the grinding I did in that winter break, I wouldn't have been a CS major.
konse desh me ho?
learned python AND all major libraries in 2 weeks??!? wthh
@@yellooo3107 its about 1 month here
@@yellooo3107 Winter break at my university is about 1 month. I go to school in America btw. So I pretty much spent the entire winter break locked up in my room grinding through the all the python courses in codecademy. I was also a student researcher in a lab so the pandas, scipy, and sklearn libraries were very useful to learn.
@@jayrollo1352 respect
This video gives me confidence ..Thanks Man I'm starting my first year as an CS student wish me luck 🍀 🥰
how you doing?
My hyper fixation on the CS field for the past two years and this is the funniest/best video I’ve seen so thank you
No joke, after rnging my way through school and not having to do any math for a couple of years I legitimately forgot at the age of 17 which side to substract from which when presented with the minus operator.
Discrete maths is important to formalize short and readable if conditions.
It's called lambda
ingenious delivery! i love
"-Is the Sky blue?
- May I first Ask if the Ocean is blue?"
Is actually very smart and the right thing to ask, considering color is perceived differently on which language you speak.
Eg. In Japanese several colors we would think of Green are perceived as a blue. Among closer related languages the differences are smaller of course. (Eg. some hues of yellow are called orange in german)
don't try to be smartass
nerd
I'm gonna step in and say this was a interesting linguistic take on this! Good job thinking of a situation where this response is not completely incompetent :D
Bruhhhh...
‘The lady that interviewed me was pretty’
I feel u man lol
Man you've come a long way, watching this video again after like a year I first found your channel
"As soon as I learned how to print 'Hello World,' I felt the power in my hands 😆😁 ...said every coder ever 🤣🤣
Bruh from the thumbnail i thought you will say " i am a cs genius,who mastered 10 languages at the age of 5 , i got 5 intership in my 1st year , and i build an app on a calculator" 🤣🤣 didn't see that coming🤣🤣. Instant sub⛈️
2:21 where I’m from, this is literally the easiest chapter in our university entrance exam. I am thankful for it’s existence
Just found this dudes 4 videos, he’s actually really funny, I’m a senior CS major and I’m currently working a crappy IT job and can relate to a lot of his videos
This is cute. I remember my first 2 years of uni (long time ago) and the things I was doing and not doing. It's good to see your ambition and drive to success! I can tell that you're way ahead of the curve among your peers. Definitely you are ahead of where I was then, objectively speaking, of course. You seem to possess a higher level of maturity and goal-oriented mindset not many teens have. Keep it up!
Finnaly an honest video about learning CS. keep it up man :)
1:05 into the video and I'm like "Yeah, they teach you to reverse a linked list in class using two walkers...but in the real world you will just use a doubly linked list that can be traversed in either direction anyway."
wow this gives me some perspective. I've been coding since I was 7, so.. more than 20 years now, and I've forgotten how much stuff I learned. it must be brutal to cram all that in 4 years.
Wdym 4 years?
I just started my first year of CS and the pics you put up of discrete maths........bro i think i just had a stroke