There is one major caveat to puzzles like this: It channels thinking patterns into a subset of real world problems. People who make/solve these types of puzzles are repeating patterns whether they realize it or not. Quantitative trading opportunities in the real world requires a broader set of problem solving skills. In every technical field the seemingly smartest people often spend all their energy competing in that field's generally accepted metrics of success. This is why it often appears that earning money is just dumb luck. It's because money isn't earned by finding a niche and then proving to people how smart you are. That may get you a well paying job but it won't solve the kinds of problems that make you wealthy (such as trading strategies).
Awesome video!! Circle Time was my first Jane Street puzzle!! I loved the problem so much that I even wrote about it lol. I opted for a math approach, but there was an even better math approach than mine lol (I had an annoying quartic but there was a really nice trig solution). It's cool to see a different (more cs-y than math) approach!
How do I get started with this domain...... quantitative trading.....Can anyone suggest some quality beginner friendly resources please..... I'm really really interested 🥺💜
Finally I got to finish the trading Engine Server series part 1 video. It took me 6 attempt to get I right. But I still don't under those code and their function yet.👍
What do you think of Java? In my experience, it is more prominent than C# in the financial services space hence I am surprised you prefer Python, C# in particular. Thanks.
Liked the content but very poor editing job idk why the editor chose to make this more memy and giving unnecessary music and overlaps though I liked the content as usual
hello coding jesus, can u make a video on quant developer work life, and how do they manage their time and work and mainly there married life Please make a short detailed video on it, it would be very beneficial for many people around the world , Thank you
Hi, I am currently a third year undergrad and an aspiring quant. I have recently come across your channel and have found the contents interesting. I sat for Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan during my college internship drive for quant roles but ended up failing GS in the quant interview(where they asked puzzles) and JP Morgan in the Mathematics aptitude test on Probab and Stats. I have good knowledge of Data structures and Algorithms and have cracked other companies for SWE role but I want to become a quantitative analyst/researcher/trader in future. Could you tell me about the math, CS and other finance related courses that are needed to ace the interviews and get into these investment Banks and other financial institutions like HFT's. Also, could you tell me about more puzzle resources (like the Jane Street archive) from where I can practice ?
hi Aditya I am a 2nd year student and an aspiring quant , but unlike you I know very less about the field and the pre requsites to get an internship / start a career in quantitative analysis/research ...could you send your linkdin profile so that we can connect and maybe with your help I can also learn about this field and other things
Once a day. Just keep an eye on the last person on the leaderboards name before you submit a solution and if there is another update and your name isn’t there, your solution failed.
I don't understand how the ring problem is a coding question, isn't solvable with just math? Edit: I tried using coordinate plane geometry and to find the explicit radius of the circles in the second optimal ring you need to solve a degree 8 polynomial that is not conveniently reducible by any means. While much more complicated and requiring more math knowledge than solving with code alone I think that getting to the point that I got and then using code to approximate the solution with numerical methods would probably have the fastest runtime.
American education has a skill based focus because that is testable especially using a narrow choice format. American mathematics education is reciepe based; the practice is about teaching very specific algorithms for addressing very specific types of problems but those algorithms are broad enough that can be applied to a wide range of common scenarios. Key words are 'common' and 'wide ranging'.. The discovery approach to maths pedagogy takes too long, there is too much variation between individual pupils, and such problems are too niche to be applicable to larger context or scenarios.
1 L@@K at that list of people 3:34 who solved the puzzle and i see about 60 not 30-50 so i paused the video and counted the first row. You were not even close using 30 so a few of us can see there's weakness in your game theory. Practice that awareness by solving # pieces in a jar.
Jesus I will tell u smth. Do not add music to your videos thinking that, it will extend your retention. It does not, opposite is true. I know because I use to add music to all my videos and now i just left plain talk. Music in this video is to loud (if u want to add one adjust to at least -30db), second it makes u sound unprofessional.
Giving a problem impossible for one to solve is sadistic. When the joke or math problem involving a mad scientist presenting an unrealistic scenario, recall this example. Surrendering on tackling a problem is reasonable. Now, there is a difference between _knowing_ that one should be able to solve a problem, which thet might be able to solve, verses tackling a problem one believes is possible for them, even at their level, to solve. By example, the Goat Problem. (Just so happens I watched a Numberphile video on the Goat Problem. Go watch the video.) The problem is simple and accessible to anyone with high school level of math but the solution requires knowledge of Complex Analysis. Like Fermat's Last Theorem easy to state but proving requires advanced high level mathematical knowledge.
Have you attempted the 1x1 Rubik's Cube?
too hard
Do JS Recruiters look at the leaderboard ?
I have high respect for people competent enough to be consistent with learning these types of things
Criminally underrated content. This isn't just good for quants. It's great for anyone with the need to solve problems.
I have a quant trader internship interview with Jane street on 27th, this should be helpful
did it help?
How did it go ?
Hey Shubho, hope You got the job & might refer me some resources & specific skillset for the job
Hey, please share experience and resources for prep
Pfff I can tell you from experience that this is not that helpful for first round
There is one major caveat to puzzles like this: It channels thinking patterns into a subset of real world problems. People who make/solve these types of puzzles are repeating patterns whether they realize it or not. Quantitative trading opportunities in the real world requires a broader set of problem solving skills. In every technical field the seemingly smartest people often spend all their energy competing in that field's generally accepted metrics of success. This is why it often appears that earning money is just dumb luck. It's because money isn't earned by finding a niche and then proving to people how smart you are. That may get you a well paying job but it won't solve the kinds of problems that make you wealthy (such as trading strategies).
The takeaway I get are (a) recognize and use your skill set and (b) ask for help when taking a problem outside your ability.
Awesome video!! Circle Time was my first Jane Street puzzle!! I loved the problem so much that I even wrote about it lol. I opted for a math approach, but there was an even better math approach than mine lol (I had an annoying quartic but there was a really nice trig solution). It's cool to see a different (more cs-y than math) approach!
Don’t stop w the memes bro they’re great
Where did he end up? His discord link doesn’t work and he doesn’t publishes any videos since 2022. Does anyone knows why? What happened?
He’s back now lmao, must have seen your comment
How do I get started with this domain...... quantitative trading.....Can anyone suggest some quality beginner friendly resources please..... I'm really really interested 🥺💜
This video is my new favorite drinking game everytime @Coding Jesus says the word "toolkit". Fr, great video!
Absolutely amazing stuff! Respect from Singapore
Finally I got to finish the trading Engine Server series part 1 video. It took me 6 attempt to get I right. But I still don't under those code and their function yet.👍
That’s why it took you 6 attempts. Study up on C# first.
What do you think of Java? In my experience, it is more prominent than C# in the financial services space hence I am surprised you prefer Python, C# in particular. Thanks.
Thanks Dude! I learned something new today
Liked the content but very poor editing job idk why the editor chose to make this more memy and giving unnecessary music and overlaps though I liked the content as usual
hello coding jesus,
can u make a video on quant developer work life, and how do they manage their time and work and mainly there married life
Please make a short detailed video on it, it would be very beneficial for many people around the world ,
Thank you
Hi, I am currently a third year undergrad and an aspiring quant. I have recently come across your channel and have found the contents interesting. I sat for Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan during my college internship drive for quant roles but ended up failing GS in the quant interview(where they asked puzzles) and JP Morgan in the Mathematics aptitude test on Probab and Stats. I have good knowledge of Data structures and Algorithms and have cracked other companies for SWE role but I want to become a quantitative analyst/researcher/trader in future. Could you tell me about the math, CS and other finance related courses that are needed to ace the interviews and get into these investment Banks and other financial institutions like HFT's. Also, could you tell me about more puzzle resources (like the Jane Street archive) from where I can practice ?
hi Aditya I am a 2nd year student and an aspiring quant , but unlike you I know very less about the field and the pre requsites to get an internship / start a career in quantitative analysis/research ...could you send your linkdin profile so that we can connect and maybe with your help I can also learn about this field and other things
@@AryanSharma-my5lg Hey, you forgot to post your profile link. Will love to connect.
@@adityasinha3851 hey can i connect with u aswell im a aspiring quant. Maybe u can help me with the resources to start my journey
@@adityasinha3851 just say which college are you.
I would be easy to connect without posting the link actually
@@aravind2624 iiit h
Very entertaining and informative. Well played sir.
The music in background is so annoying lol
thank you for your service
where have you been? did you ascend to heaven already? damn.
really helpful video, thank you
I love the video about the books
ACTUAL based video.
Do Jane Street recruiters look at the leaderboard ?
Bro is sculpted like a freakin greek god 😳
Solving puzzles at the comfort of home and under pressure like during interview are totally different things.
Mad excited 😆 I don’t even own qnt
haha he mentioned the rubiks cube as i was cleaning mine
Wow
Good job
When does Jane Street update the leader board? How do I know if my solution failed?
Once a day. Just keep an eye on the last person on the leaderboards name before you submit a solution and if there is another update and your name isn’t there, your solution failed.
Great video, loved it!
I don't understand how the ring problem is a coding question, isn't solvable with just math?
Edit: I tried using coordinate plane geometry and to find the explicit radius of the circles in the second optimal ring you need to solve a degree 8 polynomial that is not conveniently reducible by any means. While much more complicated and requiring more math knowledge than solving with code alone I think that getting to the point that I got and then using code to approximate the solution with numerical methods would probably have the fastest runtime.
Unit and a half
California accent detected. PAHzzles use MAHth
American education has a skill based focus because that is testable especially using a narrow choice format.
American mathematics education is reciepe based; the practice is about teaching very specific algorithms for addressing very specific types of problems but those algorithms are broad enough that can be applied to a wide range of common scenarios. Key words are 'common' and 'wide ranging'..
The discovery approach to maths pedagogy takes too long, there is too much variation between individual pupils, and such problems are too niche to be applicable to larger context or scenarios.
I want to have a conversation with the people who tried the 1 by 1 rubix cube …
Some people have been struggling with it for a while.
1 L@@K at that list of people 3:34 who solved the puzzle and i see about 60 not 30-50 so i paused the video and counted the first row. You were not even close using 30 so a few of us can see there's weakness in your game theory. Practice that awareness by solving # pieces in a jar.
Bro I swear I thought you were Pakistani until you revealed your name 🤣🤣🤣
Jesus I will tell u smth. Do not add music to your videos thinking that, it will extend your retention. It does not, opposite is true. I know because I use to add music to all my videos and now i just left plain talk. Music in this video is to loud (if u want to add one adjust to at least -30db), second it makes u sound unprofessional.
Thanks for the feedback, I will definitely keep this in mind for future videos.
You look more like Grigori Rasputin than Jesus Christ.
Cube
Can’t you just use CNNs to solve this?
Yes, but thats not in the spirit of the question and probably much slower than the right solution
Giving a problem impossible for one to solve is sadistic. When the joke or math problem involving a mad scientist presenting an unrealistic scenario, recall this example.
Surrendering on tackling a problem is reasonable.
Now, there is a difference between _knowing_ that one should be able to solve a problem, which thet might be able to solve, verses tackling a problem one believes is possible for them, even at their level, to solve.
By example, the Goat Problem. (Just so happens I watched a Numberphile video on the Goat Problem. Go watch the video.) The problem is simple and accessible to anyone with high school level of math but the solution requires knowledge of Complex Analysis. Like Fermat's Last Theorem easy to state but proving requires advanced high level mathematical knowledge.
Jesus, the memes are overkill. Use less please and stop the elevator music
Sounds good. Was experimenting, thanks for the feedback.
@@CodingJesus I think the memes were fun. Can agree about the elevator music though:)
Your name is Tomer?
Was wondering what's his name 😅
Content less babbling for 15 minutes, what a waste of time.
jealous
Wow, you can read me like an open book@@painfullyhuman
Just a reminder, you need to have have an iq well above 110 to work at Jane street😅
Why 110? Seems kinda weird number but I’d say closer to 140