Summary of the tutorial: - create a summary of what you want to learn - make a curriculum and put the topics in an order - learn the topics - stop at every few lessons and apply your knowledge - repeat this process.
Since I became intermediate ( 3 years self taught ), I appreciate these type of video because it gives you different perspective and a way to go about it, Thanks Tim.
That's pretty helpful, but I hope if you can explain how to learn by reading the documentation. What are the prerequisites you need before going ahead and start learning from the documentations? I have some experience in programming but I keep feeling intimidated when I go and read them.
Step 1 get an overviewm what to learn waht to nor.... - make a curriculum and put the topics in an order - reading official documentation of the framwork (reading the documentaion in one monitor then applying it in another) efficiently this is best, if the concept is complicated watch video 2x - if you don't explainit well you don't understanded it.
Have you read the book, Ultralearning? If you haven't then you should because you'll find that the methodology of your teaching fits perfectly in line with the lessons from Ultralearning. There's a reason your method works because it has been proven to do so time and time again. For anyone else reading this comment, you might find further learning topics of Anki flashcards for spaced-repetition and the buzzwordy "Feynman Technique" to be valuable augmentations to Tim's courses!
Hi Tim, I’m a big fan of your channel. I just graduated high school and I’m majoring in Computer Science next year. I want to spend the summer coding, but I don’t know where to begin. I’m essentially starting from scratch after taking a course in Python from Udacity. My main interests are working with data and math (I’ve taken multivariable calculus). I’m asking you because I enjoy your detailed content, and I know you’ll have a lot of experience answering these types of questions. I’m looking to learn robust skills and make cool projects and generally avoid being bored. Hope you can help. Thanks.
After watching many tutorials over my schooling and career Tim's videos are among the best. Python is great to start with and get your toes wet, however it might be worth it to learn one or two low er level languages using the tips in video. C#/C++ or Java or Rust for something up and coming to learn.
i expected this to be just some algoexpert or similiar course promotion, glad this is legit, respect (i mean, you mentioned it but that was good way to mention it without rubbing it into our faces. i tought the whole vid would be about it)
Find someone who's kind of an expert in the topic... Still haven't found a proper Python/Celery/Redis expert. I've found that this particular combination gets used a lot in scalable Python production environments but can't find anyone that properly explains it. Maybe Celery is too convoluted?
Summary of the tutorial:
- create a summary of what you want to learn
- make a curriculum and put the topics in an order
- learn the topics
- stop at every few lessons and apply your knowledge
- repeat this process.
How do you learn all this stuff ? Ans: " I'm smart, I'm dedicated and I work at it..."
Since I became intermediate ( 3 years self taught ), I appreciate these type of video because it gives you different perspective and a way to go about it, Thanks Tim.
The Rust series is amazing. Keep up the good work. You inspire all of us ordinary people.
That's pretty helpful, but I hope if you can explain how to learn by reading the documentation. What are the prerequisites you need before going ahead and start learning from the documentations? I have some experience in programming but I keep feeling intimidated when I go and read them.
Thanks for the content Tim , big fan of the rust series keep the good work you are my hero
Thank u so much :)
Step 1
get an overviewm what to learn waht to nor....
- make a curriculum and put the topics in an order
- reading official documentation of the framwork (reading the documentaion in one monitor then applying it in another) efficiently this is best, if the concept is complicated watch video 2x
- if you don't explainit well you don't understanded it.
I completely agree with you Tim. Thank for sharing 🙏.
Add taking written notes to the list 🙂
Have you read the book, Ultralearning? If you haven't then you should because you'll find that the methodology of your teaching fits perfectly in line with the lessons from Ultralearning. There's a reason your method works because it has been proven to do so time and time again. For anyone else reading this comment, you might find further learning topics of Anki flashcards for spaced-repetition and the buzzwordy "Feynman Technique" to be valuable augmentations to Tim's courses!
Create and Repeat 😜 Almost 1M Tim wow
The direct answer to my question since 4 years 🥶😅
Hi Tim, I’m a big fan of your channel. I just graduated high school and I’m majoring in Computer Science next year. I want to spend the summer coding, but I don’t know where to begin.
I’m essentially starting from scratch after taking a course in Python from Udacity. My main interests are working with data and math (I’ve taken multivariable calculus). I’m asking you because I enjoy your detailed content, and I know you’ll have a lot of experience answering these types of questions. I’m looking to learn robust skills and make cool projects and generally avoid being bored. Hope you can help. Thanks.
After watching many tutorials over my schooling and career Tim's videos are among the best. Python is great to start with and get your toes wet, however it might be worth it to learn one or two low er level languages using the tips in video. C#/C++ or Java or Rust for something up and coming to learn.
This is something I really needed. Thanks
i expected this to be just some algoexpert or similiar course promotion, glad this is legit, respect (i mean, you mentioned it but that was good way to mention it without rubbing it into our faces. i tought the whole vid would be about it)
Good luck! When 1M I'll be happy 😊
6K away from million mark watch Tim get that by mid week 🤯🔥
thanks this video is super helpful!
Love to watch your videos
Thanks for the video! Greatings from Ukraine!
Guys, he only needs 8k subs to get a million subs.
Tim u r amazing
Find someone who's kind of an expert in the topic... Still haven't found a proper Python/Celery/Redis expert. I've found that this particular combination gets used a lot in scalable Python production environments but can't find anyone that properly explains it. Maybe Celery is too convoluted?
The best ✌️
1M Subs... ☺️☺️
Learn by doing.
8k more subs to go! 🥺
Literally, literally!!! just searched that 😃
Please make a house tour Tim
I want leaning to find server seed lol
easy just watch at 2x
How To Learn Programming Languages and Frameworks FAST?
don't see youtube videos, read docs instead.
Do a daily-life vlog /tour after hitting 1M.