When I was first learning about NN's and DL I used a few resources. This one really helped me understand the inner workings of a NN/DL:
After that, I wrote my own python code to model a simple feedforward NN. Extending into deep learning is basic from that point (adding hidden layers). A nice little script can be found at:
I think the best way to really understand it is writing an algorithm yourself, and it's a relatively short piece of code. So you could get it in a week for sure. Lastly, my go to resource for ML/NN/DL stuff is:
He gives a nice walkthrough of some basic examples in Tensorflow. Also if you're looking to get more into the applied aspect of it vs theory, the TensorFlow home page has some nice easy tutorials (regression and classification) that I used when getting into it.
Website is very aesthetic, some feedback:
Visual Studio Code is open source and you can find all the code in the GitHub Repo. You would probably need some technology where the code executing on the server side.
A better solution would be to look at this blog post https://enlight.nyc/projects/code-editor
No way you did the enlight cohort too! I did cohort #2 and it was awesome, so much better than the codecademy web dev cohort I did. It was the only online learning I have done where I didn't just feel abandoned; there was always someone to go to for help and the enlight cohort gave me a real community to be a part of. Would also highly recommend signing up for it! Here's the link: https://enlight.nyc/courses/web-development
Hey there!
I run Enlight, a community-driven platform to learn to code. We have a really active community of creators and builders of all skill levels. You should definitely join our Discord, which is linked on our website! :)
Hey u/LilChamp27, thanks for this! Let me explain:
Our cost is $50 – we see ourselves as an alternative to Coursera, Codeacademy, and all the other online coding courses out there.
The cohort program is meant to teach skills not traditionally taught in typical introductory computer science courses — like web development (HTML/CSS/JS: APIs, Event Listeners, etc.) and data science (Python: Numpy, Pandas, Seaborn, etc.).
We're an alternative to typical online courses (which are around our price range) and introductory CS courses (thousands of dollars!). Instead of memorizing syntax, our members learn by building real projects. This is the best place to start for those interested in getting a practical introduction to coding.
I'd like to also mention that we offer scholarships to those who find the cost to be a barrier. This is outlined in our FAQ section on the site — but if anyone is reading this and would like to learn more about this opportunity, please feel free to email us at [email protected] and we'll get back to you with more information.
That would be very cool. We actually have a web scraping tutorial in Python coming up. Yours would be a great addition.
Feel free to DM me your email, can share more info!
Here's the link to contribute: https://enlight.nyc/contribute
Since you’re a little to register for classes, I highly recommend checking out https://enlight.nyc There are tons of web dev tutorials on it that can teach you the skills to do some basic development in html/css and some JavaScript frameworks!
I have a website:https://enlight.nyc and I want to incorporate user accounts (OAuth), post submissions, editor, etc.
Should I go for a static site with Gatsby making calls to an API (graphQL) or should I keep it all dynamic as seen here