Glad I randomly ran into this channel. Hands down the best programming teacher on TH-cam. High quality straight to the point content. Can't believe this is all accessible for free. Thank you for sharing such amazing content 🙏🏽🙏🏽 Greetings from a French guy 🖖🏽
This was alot of help, wanted to be a data analyst/specialist and transitioned into BI Analyst over time. Still consider myself a newbie beginner but a creative block of mine was creating projects. Thx for the tips!
This is utterly amazing, and great timing. Just spent the day making progress on the plan step for the game engine I want to make. Have 3 sheets on excel: Frameworks/Libraries, To Do List, & Resources/Tutorials, and these are still being populated. I'm excited, though started running thin today at about 4am, as there's so much to learn & research. This is gonna help so much, and really flesh out that To Do List! Honestly, didn't even think to put the Plan task on there. I'll do that tomorrow, and it'll be a great motivator to have something checked off already!
I've been following your channel for a while now and I like your content. I am a complete beginner, currently learning Python after an intercourse with C. Some terms are new to me. I have no idea, but I know I'll understand them in the future. Thank you for pouring out your knowledge/experience for us to learn from for free. I really appreciate, and I finally subscribed.
ECMAScript is a standard for scripting languages, including JavaScript, JScript, and ActionScript. It is best known as a JavaScript standard intended to ensure the interoperability ...
All fantastic advice that makes doing this kind of work more enjoyable and efficient. Using the filing cabinet analogy it's better to have folders in the drawer broken down by topic so you can quickly go to the files you need quickly rather than just throwing all the files into one draw and hunting through them later. It's mentally exhausting and time consuming. I see not using good directory structures in a project directory the same way. I feel that if there is more than a page of files in a directory and one must scroll down to see all the files, the structuring is not what it should or could be. Experienced developers also learn that going back and looking at your own code later you will have forgotten why you did what you did at the time and you'll burn up time and mental energy by trying to get your head back to where it was. It's better to clearly organize and document what you're doing while you're doing it. If you end up having to code something in an unusual way because you can't think of a better way to do it at the moment, write a paragraph 'that makes sense' explaining this.
Dude! This day of September 12, 2023; I passed my Online course of Python (I.B.M.)! Your crash courses were a helpful key. Way more than the actual online course. This was around 3:45 a.m. Florida time. Shout outs from the city of Orlando. Oh and uhh.... YOU GOT A NEW SUBSCRIBER JUST AS THIS IS POSTED. STAY AWESOME!
Thanks for geat vid. I was disappointed that you didn't go deeper in libs and common code. That's exactly what I try to do in my recent project. It was as much difficult as it was satisfying to have in one file every information in common. But again, found it very very difficult (using globals for exemple).
Probably too much of a noob question for your channel, but I clicked this video to get an idea of how to structure my project at a much more basic level. Currently working on my first 'big' project that first scrapes a dozen resources on the web to populate a database, then to correlate and process the data from the different sources to finally make the derived data available through a flask app. I struggle with keeping the project manageable, diving it up keeps the code easy and readable, but keeping track of all the parts becomes complex as it becomes spaghetti jumping from function to function to function. Diving it up less makes the code longer and hard to understand. Making it strictly modular, a separate project for each data source and each step in the process helps a lot in getting it to work, but a dozen of projects for the back end that each has to be run with consideration of the dependencies doesn't seem that great an approach either. In my mind it should be just two scripts, one for the back end and one for the flask-app to serve out the data. I guess I shouldn't complain as it works, but the project just seems to lack efficiency and with expanding code to add sources, deal with more exceptions and adding functionality I feel it is just a matter of time before I lose control.
Even if you are doing things wrong, keep doing it wrong? How's that gonna help? If you find out you were doing something wrong before, change it to the correct format right away and make sure to update the previous projects accordingly as well. Shouldn't that be the way to go?
Ugh I love and hate gradle. It's such an amazing build tool but at the same time, it genuinely pisses me off having to have a .gradle folder, gradle folder, gradlew file, gradlew.bat file, build.gradle, settings.gradle It's just way to much but at the same time, it's the tried & true way of organizing Java projects.
Bro, hello, I see your video about development in the world of blockchain, but what do you think about development on NEAR? Am I using the power of web3 and BOS?
I would say that you are a great teacher . I have a few questions that have little to nothing to do with this video . My pip does not want to install particular packages and some of the ones that it does install it doesn't want to install the entire package . I really do not want to go in there and mess with the command prompt because I do not know what I am doing . Also I am having trouble Understanding indentation . I mean I understand indenting after def name (): or indenting if name ''something ': but I am really not sure about indenting and chatgpt is not making it any easier. I am also trying to learn pygame . I would appreciate some help there
Looking to start a career in tech? Check out CourseCareers! coursecareers.com/a/techwithtim
I cant say I'm self taught cus you taught me alot more than I taught myself😊
Glad I randomly ran into this channel. Hands down the best programming teacher on TH-cam. High quality straight to the point content. Can't believe this is all accessible for free. Thank you for sharing such amazing content 🙏🏽🙏🏽
Greetings from a French guy 🖖🏽
This was alot of help, wanted to be a data analyst/specialist and transitioned into BI Analyst over time. Still consider myself a newbie beginner but a creative block of mine was creating projects. Thx for the tips!
This is utterly amazing, and great timing.
Just spent the day making progress on the plan step for the game engine I want to make. Have 3 sheets on excel: Frameworks/Libraries, To Do List, & Resources/Tutorials, and these are still being populated.
I'm excited, though started running thin today at about 4am, as there's so much to learn & research.
This is gonna help so much, and really flesh out that To Do List! Honestly, didn't even think to put the Plan task on there. I'll do that tomorrow, and it'll be a great motivator to have something checked off already!
I've been following your channel for a while now and I like your content. I am a complete beginner, currently learning Python after an intercourse with C. Some terms are new to me. I have no idea, but I know I'll understand them in the future.
Thank you for pouring out your knowledge/experience for us to learn from for free. I really appreciate, and I finally subscribed.
This is honestly so helpful, and something a lot of people don’t think through before starting. Thanks!
Thanks Tim, I literally searched for this yesterday but couldn't find a good resource, perfect timing!
ECMAScript is a standard for scripting languages, including JavaScript, JScript, and ActionScript. It is best known as a JavaScript standard intended to ensure the interoperability ...
All fantastic advice that makes doing this kind of work more enjoyable and efficient.
Using the filing cabinet analogy it's better to have folders in the drawer broken down by topic so you can quickly go to the files you need quickly rather than just throwing all the files into one draw and hunting through them later. It's mentally exhausting and time consuming. I see not using good directory structures in a project directory the same way. I feel that if there is more than a page of files in a directory and one must scroll down to see all the files, the structuring is not what it should or could be.
Experienced developers also learn that going back and looking at your own code later you will have forgotten why you did what you did at the time and you'll burn up time and mental energy by trying to get your head back to where it was. It's better to clearly organize and document what you're doing while you're doing it. If you end up having to code something in an unusual way because you can't think of a better way to do it at the moment, write a paragraph 'that makes sense' explaining this.
im making my own coding langauge with python and its been a lot of fun and also challenging!
Your own language?!
I'm so grateful for the efforts you put on this video, it helped me out a lot, thank you so much
Brilliant structure of the video !!! I love this guy !!!
GOLD Level Content. Thanks Tim.
this guy is really really really amazing, subscribing to his channel is the least i can do for him
Dude! This day of September 12, 2023; I passed my Online course of Python (I.B.M.)! Your crash courses were a helpful key. Way more than the actual online course. This was around 3:45 a.m. Florida time. Shout outs from the city of Orlando. Oh and uhh.... YOU GOT A NEW SUBSCRIBER JUST AS THIS IS POSTED. STAY AWESOME!
Nice!
Thanks Tim for this impressive content!!!
Thank you for everything Tim!
❤❤❤
Thanks for geat vid.
I was disappointed that you didn't go deeper in libs and common code. That's exactly what I try to do in my recent project. It was as much difficult as it was satisfying to have in one file every information in common. But again, found it very very difficult (using globals for exemple).
Thank you Tim its your student from kenya
This content was golden! Thank you!!
Probably too much of a noob question for your channel, but I clicked this video to get an idea of how to structure my project at a much more basic level. Currently working on my first 'big' project that first scrapes a dozen resources on the web to populate a database, then to correlate and process the data from the different sources to finally make the derived data available through a flask app. I struggle with keeping the project manageable, diving it up keeps the code easy and readable, but keeping track of all the parts becomes complex as it becomes spaghetti jumping from function to function to function. Diving it up less makes the code longer and hard to understand. Making it strictly modular, a separate project for each data source and each step in the process helps a lot in getting it to work, but a dozen of projects for the back end that each has to be run with consideration of the dependencies doesn't seem that great an approach either. In my mind it should be just two scripts, one for the back end and one for the flask-app to serve out the data. I guess I shouldn't complain as it works, but the project just seems to lack efficiency and with expanding code to add sources, deal with more exceptions and adding functionality I feel it is just a matter of time before I lose control.
This was really very valuable! Thanks Tim.
priceless video. thanks tim
What a great video, thank you very much!
Can't wait for the next codejam (timathon 2.0) 🤗
Let’s go!
Hey tim, mojo is now available to download, plz make a tutorial video on it
Thanks for this awesome video😊
Good stuff, man. Thank you.
As usual, great content Tim!
Much appreciated!
Thanks so much for the insight.
I liked the video, but I think it would have been better if you would have shown an example project instead of the blank structure
Please I need a tutorial video on the SaaS boilerplate by Apptension
13:45 programming is roblox 😂😂
Even if you are doing things wrong, keep doing it wrong? How's that gonna help?
If you find out you were doing something wrong before, change it to the correct format right away and make sure to update the previous projects accordingly as well. Shouldn't that be the way to go?
Ugh I love and hate gradle. It's such an amazing build tool but at the same time, it genuinely pisses me off having to have a .gradle folder, gradle folder, gradlew file, gradlew.bat file, build.gradle, settings.gradle
It's just way to much but at the same time, it's the tried & true way of organizing Java projects.
…Dude just use spring Boot
@@andiuptown1711 No, I've matured past java. I use C for real things and typescript/react for ui things these days. (And express for APIS)
Bro, hello, I see your video about development in the world of blockchain, but what do you think about development on NEAR? Am I using the power of web3 and BOS?
Great video
Thank you Tim from its your student kenya
Welcome!
I would say that you are a great teacher . I have a few questions that have little to nothing to do with this video . My pip does not want to install particular packages and some of the ones that it does install it doesn't want to install the entire package . I really do not want to go in there and mess with the command prompt because I do not know what I am doing . Also I am having trouble Understanding indentation . I mean I understand indenting after def name ():
or indenting if name ''something ':
but I am really not sure about indenting and chatgpt is not making it any easier. I am also trying to learn pygame . I would appreciate some help there
Well good video
@TechWithTim how many lines of code in a file is enough?
Make that beard stande out bro, looking cool withit
Can someone link a project to use as a good example
How would you structure a Flask project?
Hi Tim is not developing an ERC20 Token becoming a boss
Did not appreciate the sponsor segue. Installed sponsor block.
I am 1k liker ❤❤❤❤
Ben 10
4th
how to structure thumbnail spelling
Got here early ❤
Can I get a pin? 🙏🏽
First 😌
Still can’t believe these are videos instead of a 2 min read blog post lol. Milking elementary level content..
Not everyone can absorb information that quickly
bro stop being a gay lord this is unbelievable content
Real world like example you all changing what you do not control then come on and say you created something