Hi! It sounds like there's some basic stuff you need some help understanding so you can troubleshoot what's going on. We've all had to figure this stuff out, so no big deal that it's new to you.
ssh https://www.ucl.ac.uk/isd/what-ssh-and-how-do-i-use-it
Some basic linux terminal commands https://hackr.io/blog/basic-linux-commands
Ip addresses https://techterms.com/definition/ip_address
Hopefully this helps. Let me know if there's anything else and I'll do my best to answer.
You can check hacker.io tutorial they will have categories and a bunch of tutorials free and some paid.
Do you have a bit of a budget? Linux academy free and paid - these guys just added 70 new courses and are pretty hot. But it’s mostly paid after some free courses to see their teaching style.
Hope this helps.
Good luck.
hackr.io - programming tutorials and designing and cooking also.
fatfingers.com - misspelled actions in eBay, so no bidders and cost stays low.
textbooknova.com - free books for studies.
​
Work towards Linux sys admin certification
​
With one or more of these certifications and decent communications skills you will never have to look for work ---- guaranteed.
BTW i am a retired Infrastructure Project Manager . Mostly working in the Banking and Telco sectors
​
>Where is a good place to get HTML, CSS and JS documentation?
I would totally agree that Mozilla has the best documentation. In addition, I would also like to throw this out there in case you haven't seen it yet: https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-html-5
This site has a ton of good resources and links for HTML, CSS, JS...etc.
Hope this helps!
Leetcode and hackerrank are probably not a good way to improve ( https://betterprogramming.pub/how-you-practice-with-leetcode-for-interviews-is-probably-bad-d4ee2bd7b05f?gi=4db90a06ce0c ). I strongly suggest starting a simple project of your own and reading good books: https://hackr.io/blog/best-programming-books
Since you are 15 and have not formally learned programming concepts I would recommend going the book route. Blog posts are useful for specific examples and referencing specific commands or libraries you need to brush up on, but they rarely cover best practices and the most efficient ways to do things.
This blog posts has a lot of good examples of beginner books, some of them are free as well.
https://hackr.io/blog/10-best-python-books-for-beginners-and-advanced-programmers
I would say Python Programming: An Introduction to Computer Science (3rd Edition) would be a good choice because it is trying to teach you programming concepts while using Python to do that. It may help you kill two birds with one stone.
There are free ones, but I find the paid ones are generally much better. Most publisher sites have tons of promo codes use something like Honey or retailmenot to find a promo code. I regularly get 60% off of tech books I purchase.
R and Python are two very powerful tools that happen to very easy to learn. The learning curve is really amazing and in no time you will be doing lots of cool stuff.
Besides, they're very popular right now so there is a ton of material where you can learn about them.
Top 10 best R programming video tutorials
Python itself is not an IDE. You would write code in a text editor and execute it with python. And without GUI libraries, it would all be command line input and output.
You might be thinking of an IDE which has handy features for writing and running code. Here is a list of python IDEs https://hackr.io/blog/best-python-ide
I prefer to first go through wiki - https://www.reddit.com/r/learnjavascript/wiki/index gives https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-javascript and that has good resources
If this step fails, I check out https://awesomelists.top/ and if I still don't get some results, I'll probably ask in specific subreddits
When searching online, I'll try to see if stackoverflow/stackexchange has the answer for the specific topic, otherwise search for articles which can be hit/miss depending upon seo stuff
I'd say CodeAcademy is not the best place to learn code. Instead I'd recommend FreeCodeCamp and their courses. When I was getting into code there were not nearly as many free learning resources as there are now, so you should admire what exists. For project ideas do your own (or clone someone else's, but write your code). Take a look at rising github repos, something you could accomplish, but it's too early for you to do so at this stage. Mosh also has some free tutorials you could watch at YT (Programming with Mosh). Remember to Google whatever it is that you cannot do, you'll learn a lot along the way. You could also look into what Hackr.io offers (it's a community of people trying to help each other out). Happy coding, don't give up! 😉
Thanks! All of the visuals are javascript based. I used d3.js as my library of choice for almost everything. The city visualization was done in two parts, first with Leaflet.js for the map and then using d3 for the gauge on the map. The search functionality is Typeahead/Bloodhound.
Sorry if that's a lot! If you don't have a background in web development, that may all seem like nonsense.
To learn visualization basics, I have a short tutorial you can walk yourself through. Learning visualization is daunting: you need to practice good Design Principles, Data Analysis and Integrity Principles, and also have the ability to write code in some form or another.
But interactives are in a golden age right now, thanks to the web - so that is a good place to start (learning how to do web development). Mozilla Developer Network has great resources for starting.
Advanced visualization like you saw in the article? You'll need to know web stuff first, but once you do you just need to learn the D3.js library. There are some decent intro tutorials here. The world needs more people who can communicate visually, because it is so important when bridging the gap between complex stuff and public understanding.
Best way to find online programming courses and tutorials
You go to google, search for a language (for ex: AngularJS), get 100s of suggestions but don't know which one to choose from those 100s of good looking tutorials. First page results on Google doesn't mean that they are the best tutorials as Google ranks results as per SEO ranking and NOT as per content quality of the tutorial. Hence you end up wasting hell lot of time, money, energy and peace in experimenting with multiple tutorials to find a good one. The worst thing is that your passionate start peter out into search for the best course whereas you should be just starting with the best course in under 1 minute. Hackr.io is the solution.
What Hackr.io do:It recommends you the best online programming tutorials for any programming language. All the tutorials are submitted & voted by the programming community. It's like StackOverflow for online programming tutorials. Community upvotes the tutorials they like hence overtime best tutorials rises to the top of the page.
Give it a hit - https://hackr.io/
read this article from official java site - http://www.javaworld.com/article/2076864/java-concurrency/building-an-internet-chat-system.html
Also for learning Java - https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-java
Do you have any certifications or a hackerrank assessment?
That should be the first line of your resume (e.g. as a subtitle under your name). E.g.
I.D. Kanymore Certified Javascript developer, Hacker rank 88.9
E.g. see https://hackr.io/blog/best-javascript-certification
Also check out /r/GetEmployed/ for help with your resume and interviewing.
Hey there! You have TONS to choose from, you can literally search it but these are my faves.
- w3schools.com (the first site i was told to use as my programmer bible)
- hackr.io
I, personally, found Flask to be a little easier to use, but it’s also depending on your application. Just throwing that out there for future reference. here’s a good comparison of the two.
To cut it short: "It's a threshold"
But I think you are going in the wrong direction here! This is the part where it shows that you are missing some experince. That's completly fine and no need to worry!
But I would highly recommend you to be careful with instructables for learning. In my experince they mostly focus on "How do you get this example working", but that's not the thing you should focus on when learning!
You should focus on "How can this teach me to do it myself"!
I must admit there are to much of those tutorials that don't explain their code well enough! It's really difficult to find the few good ones. What I always try to do is to look at what they did and then try to build it myself in a modified way. (E.g. in your case: Make the robot follow the line)
And to be fair, this is a very tricky thing for a new programer to pick up.
Unless your doing high precision math , doubles and floats can be used interchangeably.
https://hackr.io/blog/float-vs-double
@OP. Keep going , it'll get more fun once you understand it
PostgreSQL is far more well-engineered, full-featured, and standards-compliant. For years, MySQL was terribly engineered. It would silently delete data is certain situations. My favorite MySQL gotcha is that if you issue a GRANT statement with a typo in the user's name instead giving a "user does not exist" error it simply creates a new user with the misspelled name.
I mean, it was pure shit. The only saving grace is that it was super-easy to get up and running, so a whole generation of web technologies in the early 2000s defaulted to using it (i.e. Wordpress).
The current technical story with MySQL is a little better, but it is backed by Oracle. So you still have to beware.
This comparison is a decent one: https://hackr.io/blog/postgresql-vs-mysql
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
checkout r/androiddev for more help. Udacity courses on android are good. It doesn't make any big difference on which android version you learn. you can also check on hackr.io. Except for Android App Development by Stanford, all other courses are available and rated by others.
Never ask anyone if they like your product
Test early and often
But first, use expert reviews
More than usable and desirable, great user experience is…
Get on board with Design Thinking
Use personas to keep the user in focus
Learn to make research-informed design decisions
Try mapping your product ecosystem with the team
To get started you can refer https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-ux-research
The research part of the UX continuum is defined as an action where you investigate something systematically. In UX Research, you apply various techniques in order to add context and insight into the design process. Research is needed to reach new conclusions, establish facts, and find problems.
https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-ux-research
This website aggregates all important tutorials in one site
I hope this was helpful.
I can recommend you Javascript tutorial where you can find many basic to advance, free to paid online tutorials list by many MOOCs and other experts ranked by the developer community. It's easy to find the right match for you based on your needs and requirements.
Because if a programmer acts like he's too smart, he will:
a) stop learning b) stop being critical toward his own work
Point a) will make it hard for him to try to find new techniques to allow him to work faster. Point b) will give him a hard time debugging his own work, and refactoring it. For learning programming visit - https://hackr.io/
I sometimes do the technical part of interviews and I can say with confidence I would not care about any kind of certifications.
Personal projects on github > any kind of certificate
That being said, here you go
https://hackr.io/blog/best-cpp-certification
Thanks,
https://hackr.io/blog/best-cybersecurity-certification
just checking, which of the certificates are better regarded in the cyber security field?
Or best return for money and time invested?
Since it's just mining you're looking at the Redpanda link the other user provided is good, mining is pretty simple it's literally just a case of building a rig and clicking a bat file. If you're looking for something more in depth then there are a few lists of fairly good courses here or here, but again for mining there's no real need for in depth courses because it's quite simple.
If you're used to building computers and whatnot you should find setting up a mining rig to be incredibly easy. The only bit people often fall down on, or skip entirely, is financial modelling. If you do intend on putting any meaningful money in then spend a bit of time learning about how difficulty impacts earnings, how the Ethereum merge will impact profitability of other coins and also Google "NPV" and use it to calculate the present value of your estimated rewards for comparison to alternatives*.
*Obviously this may or may not be worthwhile dependent on how much you're investing.
No C# is harder. C and Python is much easier. Rust isn't hard not even Javascript is hard. C# isn't for everything. It's for the .NET Framework which is a Microsoft thing. I'm not using anything Microsoft. I using Linux so learning C# is worthless for me to learn. Learn what are popular. C# is still on the list, but not many rushing to learn C# over the others.
https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/top-10-programming-languages-to-learn-in-2022/
https://hackr.io/blog/best-programming-languages-to-learn-2022-jobs-future
>Is Object Oriented Programming a must for frontend development?
Very rarely is anything needed or a must. OOP is a programming paradigm - both Functional and Procedural are also pretty common paradigms to follow on the frontend.
React (with hooks) follows a more functional approach. Angular is more OOP.
No one paradigm is "right" - different people will be more comfortable with different methods of writing. As you grow as a dev, you'll develop preferences for one style over another. But it's good to be able to read and understand code in any style.
try dipping your hands in one of these SPA frameworks.
https://hackr.io/blog/best-javascript-frameworks
compare their popularity din if you are looking at them for income down the road
https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?q=vue.js,react.js,angular.js
True. But the stated goal, very clear in the presentations, is to eliminate AS MANY positions as feasible. It's not personal, it's just business. Those are the AI/Deep Learning business pitches.
Suggestion: https://hackr.io/blog/artificial-intelligence-courses
Ένα tuttorial μια απλή αναζήτηση και ψάξιμο στα χαμένα μόνο να σε μπερδέψουν μπορούν. Πρέπει να βρεις ένα μέντορα. Όχι κάποιον που ξέρει από προγραμματισμό αλλά κάποιον που ξέρει καλά και το χώρο. Θα πρέπει να σου εξηγήσει τι παίζει στην αγορά και να βρείτε μαζί(δοκιμάζοντας) τι είναι αυτό που σου αρέσει περισσότερο.
Μπορείς να κάνεις μια εγγραφή στο pluralsight ή να αγοράσεις μετά καλά courses από udemy κτλ. Συνήθως αυτές οι πλατφόρμες έχουν χωρίσει τα courses ανά επίπεδο. Το κόστος γενικά είναι σχετικά μικρό.
Από όπου και να ξεκινήσεις θα χρειαστεί να δεις τα essentials. Αν θες να ξεκινήσεις με web θα πρέπει να ξεκινήσεις με τα βασικά html/css/javascript. Και μετά να αποφασίσεις αν θες να μείνει σε πιο front ή back τεχνολογίες. Οπό εκεί μετά μπαίνεις σε frameworks κτλ.
Trends: https://hackr.io/blog/best-programming-languages-to-learn-2022-jobs-future
Η πληροφορική είναι τόσο αχανής σαν επιστήμη και πρέπει να διαλέξεις μονοπάτι. Δε θα τα μάθεις ποτέ όλα(για την ακρίβεια ούτε το 1%)
Μη βιαστείς... Είναι μαραθώνιος. δεν είναι sprint
What do you think about each approach? Pros/cons of each?
Where you're at, your goal is to start trying to absorb all the fundamentals and try to make simple things. I also recommend you always try to reduce the complexity/scope of things you have to learn/work with at one time.
My only concern with Django is that it's a full-featured framework with it's own concepts that you'll have to learn on top of learning fundamental backend development and trying to make stuff. Those concepts may confuse you, distract from learning the fundamentals, etc. I don't think there's any benefit to learning it where you're at right now.
Instead, if you want to stick with Python, I'd look for something lighter, like Flask. This article seems to explain this stuff https://hackr.io/blog/flask-vs-django
The other thing to pay attention to is which path enables you to make progress learning and building stuff. On one hand, being comfortable in Python might enable you to learn faster. On the other, the documentation and learning resources for the Python/Flask/Django route might be horrible compared to TOP and the Node.js route.
Feel free to shoot any questions or thoughts back.
When you finish the MOOC then it is time for frame works like Spring Boot. There are a lot of frameworks, but Spring Boot you will see the most in jobs requiring Java. Here are some other frameworks to read about:
Start with learning html and css, after that I would recommend learning the basics of programming with javascript or python. You can look up different fields where the language is prevalent and decide which one you want to learn. As for finding good tutorials my first approach is checking hackr.io and see the tutorials with the most thumbs up together with searching "best way to learn X programming language" on youtube. Hope this helps.
I'm in the same boat. I would characters myself as a an advanced beginner/early intermediate Python coder; plenty left to learn but have a good handle on the basics. I'm trying to make the transition from scripting to building standalone applications, in my case using tkinter, object-oriented programming, linting, unit testing, git/hub, etc. I'm not sure if what I'm doing would look right at all to a professional, but I know I can get feedback on that eventually. When I get to the final step (which will be modest, because it's been a lot of work just to get this far, lol), I don't know really know how to pack it up with a bow for the "end user"(I like to pretend I'm doing this professionally even though I don't expect anyone to find what I'm producing especially useful. End game is inclusion in a portfolio to be showcased on Indeed).
In your case, it seems like you want a web framework like Django or Flask. You could create a mobile and/or desktop client using Kivy. Is that the direction you're looking into?
Incidentally, I just came across this survey of Python web frameworks, in case that's any use to you.
Dang. I didn't save the beginning of my last comment/question... Well, I guess that's just the way it goes when you don't think to save partial work. Oops. Doh! I went looking to find the names of the certifications that were catching my eye. Linux+ CompTIA and LPIC-1,2&3 out of the ones I found here: https://hackr.io/blog/best-linux-certifications
Nice, a framework is a collection of packages and libraries that enable you to quickly build complex applications without having to rewrite a lot of the underlying logic. My personal favorite python frameworks are Django and Flask (Django in particular comes with a “batteries included” philosophy where you can be up and running with a full application in just a few minutes).
A common web development pattern is to leverage a backend API with a JavaScript front end framework. If you wanted to go down the front end path.
Or you can ditch web development and learn the Development operations side of it.
It doesn’t really matter which direction to go in at the start, but knowing python, I would go further down that path with python based backend frameworks. Some helpful links:
https://hackr.io/blog/python-frameworks
https://javascript.plainenglish.io/ultimate-web-developer-roadmap-for-2021-6758edd0bd3f
https://medium.com/javarevisited/the-2019-web-developer-roadmap-ab89ac3c380e
I only knew about that link being discussed on reddit and other sites. I had to look up now to know that there's a difference between data science and analysis. In that process, I found this, might help: https://hackr.io/blog/data-analytics-courses
Python is usually recommended as a good programming language because its easy to learn and you can build stuff that other programming languages would take longer to build in a small amount of time; for example, Java (copied):
class HelloWorld {
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println("Hello, World!");
}
}
python:
print("Hello, world!")
Programming languages practice the same ideas but the syntax and application differs, so learning the syntax of python will be a good foundation. In case you're still interested in what you can do with python, here are some examples: back end web development, data science, webscrapping, artifical intellegence, and machine learning, but again before getting into anything at all your main concern should be learning the programming language in depth maybe do some beginner projects to confirm: https://hackr.io/blog/python-projects. After that I'd look and see what you're into. Good luck!
What you're looking for is called a web framework. They are basically libraries containing features specifically designed for web development.
Most common ones include: - A router - a way to define URI addresses (e.g.: /home or /api/action) and map them to the code that needs to be executed - Controllers - Special classes that decide what to return for specific routes - An ORM - allows you to map the database tables as classes, to manipulate them more easily - Views - files that render how each response looks, this is mainly for HTML. In your case, you won't be needing this, if you're going to use it as an API, but they're always included in web frameworks.
Obviously, there's way more to the story, but, basically, you need to look for a Java web framework.
This seems like a good place to start: https://hackr.io/blog/java-frameworks
Depending on whether you want to specialize in one direction or whether you prefer a distribution-based or distribution-neutral certification, there are different options for you. Don't know why this overview is called the 5 best Linux certifications, cause it covers much more, but it gives you a good overview of the market: https://hackr.io/blog/best-linux-certifications
If this person is self-taught, and if this is his first serious piece of code, then I could forgive him and coach him.
If this person is an "experienced" developer, then he has 24 hours to re-factor and simplify this or we may have to rethink his role.
I mean go-tos? And not just one!
His next assignment is to read the first book on this list. Then we will talk and he will read the next book, and so on until he quits in frustration or becomes a competent programmer.
Your dismissing professors who hold PhD and Master degrees, with some who work in the industry too.
It probably doesn't really matter using them interchangeably, but they are distinct.
These are some articles I've found on the web:
https://hackr.io/blog/coding-vs-programming-difference-you-should-know
https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/programming-vs-coding-a-short-comparison-between-both/
I'm going to email some of my professors and get feedback. I'll update later. I'd also be interested in reading articles that promote coding and programming to be the same.
I would start with an online program to learn. They will guide you through things and provide you with an online IDE.
Some options:
https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-javascript
https://www.codecademy.com/catalog/language/javascript
https://www.freecodecamp.org/learn (This is not only javascript specific. But they have a good Javascript section.)
Once you’re ready to work locally, I highly recommend the following steps:
Download Visual Studio Code (free) as an IDE. From there you can write JS with code correction. Download NodeJS to setup a local server instance to run code. You will need this for just about anything even if it’s not a server you are making. It is used for compiling code, Angular, React, etc. you can also run code with it.
I'd suggest having a look at these links for some ideas:
Here's a great blog I just read about becoming a data analyst with no experience.
https://hackr.io/blog/become-data-analyst-with-no-experience
You have experience, which is good enough for most Software Application administration positions. Keep applying while you have your current job. Earn certs ASAP - you should probably start with the Microsoft SQL certification and then move into the MCSA.
Even people with 10 year experience will never think they are “good” it is normal!
It is a great first step that you want to take in doing side projects!
If you want to get into mobile app development it’s mainly two platforms
iOS which would require you to learn swift and have a mac.
Android - which uses Java/ Kotlin
I would go with the one whatever your native phone is so it is easier to test your apps.
IOS - https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-ios-swift?q=iOS
Android- https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-android-development ( you want to be familiar with java)
Congrats bro, I also passed my AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner exam on Saturday with a 970/1000, within 10 days of practicing I did not have any real AWS experience before starting but had a 5yr+ career in Information technology. Get Familiar with the Subject Areas. When you are preparing for an exam, subject area for the exam becomes the most important thing that you must understand. Objectives of AWS certification is very important review them carefully, and then start your preparation through the Valid study material to know the complexity of each subject area.
How I prepared:
Actually, read all the whitepapers on the exam outline from AWS on this Cert.
Take all AWS Tutorials and Courses.
https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-amazon-web-services-aws
Read the Valid AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner exam study guide (60%) Practice valid exam practice questions. Most of questions are matched.
https://www.dumpsforsales.com/product/CLF-C01-dumps-pdf/
At the end one thing more I want to say, reading AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner Exam community reviews and discussions regarding exam experience of different candidates will be helpful.
Good luck :)
Don't be sad hatemyjobZ, I will suggest you read all the whitepapers on the exam outline from AWS on this Cert.
Take all AWS Tutorials and Courses.
https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-amazon-web-services-aws
Read the Valid AWS Certified Solutions Architect- Professional exam study guide (60%) Practice valid exam practice questions. Most of questions are matched.
https://www.dumpsforsales.com/product/SAP-C01-dumps-pdf/
At the end one thing more I want to say, reading AWS Certified Solutions Architect- Professional Exam community reviews and discussions regarding exam experience of different candidates will be helpful.
Good luck :)
>Is the knowledge transferable?
Absolutely.
In most cases Kotlin is just a newer, cleaner, more concise and null-safe version of Java which also supports functional programming.
I think it matters more what company/industry you're in than the location. What type of software development are you looking to go into?
That said, I think you would probably do well by learning Java. Python is also great because of its simplicity and incredible versatility.
https://hackr.io/blog/best-programming-languages-to-learn-2020-jobs-future
Dude, I am just trying to help you and you are only giving evasive answers. We don’t know what your curriculum is or what you are focusing on in C++. C++ is a broad subject. But to help you a bit, try this one https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-c-plus-plus
Https://Hackr.io has a bunch of tutorials most people are starting with Python these days. Pretty large community around it! Once you have some of the basics down google beginner projects and try to build some smaller things.
Best way to learn is to find a project and try to build it. Also, learn to use git and sign up with gitlabs or github.
There are many online tutorials and free & paid courses for JS if you want to learn JS.
there are few good books for JS too. you can have a look at the following links.
That's actually a quote from the author of C++!
Essentially, while C++ is based off C, the biggest difference between the two is that C++ supports object-oriented programming (OOP for short). There's a whole bunch of other differences, but I believe that's the main one. So if you're used to C, and don't like/don't need OOP (which you probably don't in robots)... that would explain why she prefered C.
To add about where C is used, I found this discussion. Pretty interesting read.
I would like to suggest you if you want to learn sqlite, I am sharing with you one resource it provides you series of online tutorial and provides real time examples. Just visit below link
https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-sqlite
Vou dar a minha opinião, sendo da área. Se o teu objetivo for só aprender por alto e desenvolver algum tipo de projeto pessoal não precisas de cursos pagos. Como já foi digo aqui, tens sites gratuitos e recomendados como o codecademy ou até o hackr.io.
A parte do português não faz sentido porque a maior parte das linguagens de programação encontram-se definidas para serem utilizadas internacionalemente, e como o Inglês é a lingua universal... 1 + 1 = 2!
Já agora, se tirares uma certificação da Microsoft ou da Cisco, que são conhecidas, essa certificação é válida em Portugal. A linguagem da fala ou da escrita não interessa para as tuas competências técnicas. Eu posso aprender a programa em Portugal e trabalhar no estrangeiro!
Se quiseres aprendar para intercalares o mercado recomendo-te tirar um curso ou realizares um Boot Camp...
Thanks everyone for your replies. My first goal in this process is to put together a coherent and specific learning plan that I can stick to. After reviewing your advice and doing some online research, this is my new list of priorities. Please let me know how I can improve this.
​
Try this. https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-unity And also watch Unity's own tutorials. They are good. Moreover I will advice you to make a small game that utilizes whatever feature that you want to learn just to be motivated! 🙂 Have Fun!
—* Unity and Unreal: These frameworks ride on top of Metal primarily used for real-time graphics or video games on the App Store. Apple outright gives them free press (more true with Unreal engine) from WWDC 2018 This is developed and maintained by Unity3D and Epic Games respectively.
—* React: Heavily compared to as the other cross platform framework that I usually have to explain the difference between that and Flutter. Utilize essentially a WebView exploit (although many swear it compiles down to the binary and don’t see it tbh but hey to each their own) and has way too many flaws that people still overlook imo due to that nature. Also this framework is still in beta after what three/ four years? You can read more here This is developed and maintained by Facebook.
—* PhoneGap: Think of this as the predecessor of React and Flutter but really just a website that lives on the phone. This is developed by Adobe.
—* Xamarin: This is Microsoft’s cross platform framework that allows you to take existing apps or apps written in C# and runs it on top of a client layer almost like Unity3D more or less.
Veja essa série de posts, acho que é o que você quer. Ela cita vários links no meio da postagem que também podem te interessar.
Tem também esse site para você ver como ficam algumas linguagens após serem compiladas em assembly.
Por fim, aqui tem uma lista de tutoriais de assembly.
This is not surprising. Almost no one, except Adobe, reads Linear RAW. The thumbnail they refer to is there. But, there is also a Linear RAW, that they probably do not read.
Beginners must log on to https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-darktable to get strated with darktable.
It's not fault of darktable actually your camera is doing it.All cameras do it but many photographers don't realize it.Since you are saving photo in JPG format which is smaller in size many of the data captured by camera sensors is lost during compression process.
Since you are a newbie in photo editing you should visit https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-darktable for guidance
I hope I was pretty much helpful.
Great!!!!
If someone wants video tutorials,you can check https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-ux-research
this site consists of free as well as paid tutorials
Nice work dude!
If anyone is interested in audio-visual resource I've found a site,it aggregates different tutorial sites together
Learn Blender here https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-blender
Use Blender to create beautiful 3D models for video games, 3D printing, house design etc. No prior knowledge required.
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My raw files always looked worse than my jpegs
My biggest complaint with shooting in raw was always that I couldn't get the images to look like the did on the back of the camera. The ONLY way to get your Nikon files to look exactly like the jpegs was to use the incredibly clunky Nikon Capture software. I have no doubt the software is better now but 8 years ago it was unbearable to use and I haven't given it another chance.
Editing raw was always such a slow process
My second biggest complaint simply had to do with the amount of space the files took up and the amount of time it took to process them. I got so good at shooting weddings that my white balance and exposures were right on the money 90% of the time. If my shot was slightly "off" I would delete it and reshoot it right there on the spot. When I would cull through the images after a wedding I would usually delete the bad ones and then run the good shots through a batch I created in Photoshop to give them a "look." For years I would shoot a wedding, edit the wedding in about 5 hours and deliver the files. I would make around $3000 - $5000 per wedding and it would take approximately 2 days of work. While my raw shooting colleagues took literally weeks to deliver their files. I could in many cases deliver the weddings the day after the event. My clients were happy and I was free to move on to other projects or go on vacation.
If you are just about to start off, I highly recommend Automate the boring stuff with python. It does a really good job of teaching you the basics and also towards the end it gives you a ton of project ideas. Even if you don't want to learn from this book do check out the project section to get some ideas.
Also check out Hackr.io, it has huge collection of community submitted resources for almost all languages.
You can visit onto Hackr Javascript tutorials to find a list of diverse online tutorials for both beginning and advance stages which are displayed in order of their ranks given by the developer community. I feel it will really be helpful.
You can refer to Hackr.io. It is having all the preeminent online tutorials list for C++. The most intriguing factor is that those tutorials are upvoted by the user community. This makes the results more credible and genuine. There are many diverse tutorial options, so it's a hassle-free experience for you there.
Unlike the other poster, I didn't really use Youtube. (The Awesome React post does list a few of them, though).
This page does list a few video tutorials that I'm familiar with. I've done the ones by Egghead, Tyler McGinnis, and Wes Bos, as well as a video series from Front End Masters.
Many of these will require payments, so definitely check out the Facebook docs and Awesome React youtube links first!
Most of the android courses online are for beginners. I would advice starting from the middle of the course, as it would help you skip the beginner's part. There are some portals who provide reviews of people who have experienced different android tutorial - https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-android-development You may refer such portals for help. Also it would be more helpful if you could search for specific topic on youtube.
Hey buddy great Post,
I found something helpful which I want to share as I was browsing the web for learning some coding algorithms it was very difficult to visit different sites at a time but I found a site named https://hackr.io/
I went here and found that the stuff from best programming sites were all allocated at a single place so I just thought of sharing with you all....
I hope it will help you This might be useful to your readers: https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-lisp
Hey buddy great Post,
I found something helpful which I want to share as I was browsing the web for learning some coding algorithms it was very difficult to visit different sites at a time but I found a site named https://hackr.io/
I went here and found that the stuff from best programming sites were all allocated at a single place so I just thought of sharing with you all....
I hope it will help you This might be useful to your readers: https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-kotlin
Hey buddy great Post,
I found something helpful which I want to share as I was browsing the web for learning some coding algorithms it was very difficult to visit different sites at a time but I found a site named https://hackr.io/
I went here and found that the stuff from best programming sites were all allocated at a single place so I just thought of sharing with you all....
I hope it will help you This might be useful to your readers: https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-jquery
Great Post Thanks a lot it helped me a lot I am also going to share it to my friends and over my social media. Also, Hackr.io is a great platform to find and share the best tutorials and they have a specific page for Flask
This might be useful to your readers: https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-flask
Great Post Thanks a lot it helped me a lot I am also going to share it to my friends and over my social media. Also, Hackr.io is a great platform to find and share the best tutorials and they have a specific page for Elixir
This might be useful to your readers: https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-elixir
Clojure is a dialect of the Lisp programming language created by Rich Hickey. Clojure is a general-purpose programming language with an emphasis on functional programming. It runs on the Java Virtual Machine, Common Language Runtime, and JavaScript engines.
For learning Clojure visit - https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-clojure
Lambda Type Inference Before Java 8 you would have to specify what interface to implement, when making anonymous interface implementations. Here is the anonymous interface implementation example from the beginning of this text:
stateOwner.addStateListener(new StateChangeListener() {
public void onStateChange(State oldState, State newState) { // do something with the old and new state. } });
With lambda expressions the type can often be inferred from the surrounding code. For instance, the interface type of the parameter can be inferred from the method declaration of the addStateListener() method (the single method on the StateChangeListener interface). This is called type inference. The compiler infers the type of a parameter by looking elsewhere for the type - in this case the method definition.
For learning programming visit - https://hackr.io/
In computer programming, a function prototype or function interface is a declaration of a function that specifies the function's name and type signature (arity, data types of parameters, and return type), but omits the function body.
This is true for functions as well as variables. For functions the declaration needs to be before the first call of the function. A full declaration includes the return type and the number and type of the arguments. This is also called the function prototype.
For learning programming visit https://hackr.io/
New HTML5 Elements The most interesting new HTML5 elements are:
New semantic elements like <header>, <footer>, <article>, and <section>.
New attributes of form elements like number, date, time, calendar, and range.
New graphic elements: <svg> and <canvas>.
New multimedia elements: <audio> and <video>.
New HTML5 API's (Application Programming Interfaces) The most interesting new API's in HTML5 are:
HTML Geolocation HTML Drag and Drop HTML Local Storage HTML Application Cache HTML Web Workers HTML SSE
For learning HTML5 visit here - https://hackr.io/tutorials/learn-html-5
Try C or C# or C++ they are the most simple but basic ones to go more advance try python. You can learn more languages here https://hackr.io/ they have the best programming tutorials voted by the programming community give it a hit hackr.io
There are tons of SQL tutorials online but it's very difficult to find the best one. You can find the best online SQL courses and tutorials voted by programming community here: https://hackr.io/tutorials/sql