Good point(s). Maybe it's because I'm neck deep in Assembly and I'm finally really understanding what is happening when I create a program. It's so much work and I've spent so much money to have a long-term career that is actually challenging and interesting to me.
I can see the merit in treating AI as another tool in the box.
So, I'm a CS student right now. Should graduate with a BS in May 2025. I'm thinking that I should push forward for a grad degree because I don't want to become a human prompt generator.
This is my favorite place on the internet.
Any extra tips or tricks are welcome!
Yesterday I learned that set -x
enables trace for a bash, sh, or zsh script and prints the trace to the terminal.
I have put lots of resources for assembly and LC3 systems in the sidebar.
Have an awesome day :)
https://www.freecodecamp.org/ https://www.freecodecamp.org/learn
They offer courses supported by YouTube videos. They also offer certifications for subjects like JavaScript Algorithms and Data Structures, Backend Development and APIs, and Machine Learning with Python.
https://www.theodinproject.com/
Full-stack web development course. The end result should be a deployed website for your portfolio.
Lots of free courses on tons of subjects including conputer science and mathematics.
Hi all! I installed nvim and completed the tutorial. I have been using CLion, PyCharm, IntelliJ IDEA, and VSCode. I primarily use an Ubuntu OS. I am open to a different distro.
When I tried to configure VSCode to allow me to use C++, Python, Java, and Assembly on one IDE it became unstable. Can nvim handle that?
Where do I go to figure how to customize this thing? For example, I don't know what I should be installing for basic linting (I'm still a student). Do I need different modules for each language? Any resources would be most appreciated.
Thank you!
Student, aspiring developer, dog-lover, hiker (with my pups whenever possible)