Being able to understand this stuff on a whiteboard is EXTREMELY important for interviews. I know it seems harder, but this is a good skill to have that isn't really taught. Hats off to Prime for this doing this format.
I love how he dumps thoughts, like when he said "but what if they have children," it feels like they could have been my thoughts and he speaks my mind in an alternative universe. It's oddly rare.
I'll be honest guys, I have no f'in clue what the f is going on. Same as when taking those uni algo courses that made no sense how it would be applicable to real world problems, none.
69 is a sex position. Also, if you do stuff like searches through some data where you don't want to go through all the elements, and have recognised that some elements have some relationship, (Like DOM nodes in HTML), you'd use Tree algorithms. Or Graphs if you want to find the "shortest path" if a very large NxM grid.... And many many other cases. "Real world" really depends on what you work as well. These algorithms make sense in Graphics Development, Game dev, Simulations, etc. Not much sense in Backend Web Development. Good Frontend developers actually also are required to use these stuff if you want highly performant UIs if you're dealing with very large datasets. I have to deal with one massive GIS app, which has been "fun" to solve.
We have a use case, where in real time we need to make many calculation for the quickest routes based on different factors (like gps, vehicle speed, etc) to find out which drivers to contact. Existing libraries like graphhopper are helpful, but do not have all use cases, so we developers sometimes need to be able to do such calculations. Also sometimes existing libraries do have solutions for specific use cases, but are just to generic and slow, so we for good performance we need to implement custom solutions.
I highly recommend taking Colt Steele's course on data structures and algorithms on Udemy. He explains these concepts better than anyone i've seen. Prime is an excellent programmer but not the best at teaching what he knows
You can’t just hop onto a part 2 algo course without any prior and nag that you don’t understand anything. It’s not for you then. Can’t just hop onto Ancient Egyptian Algebra and ace it.
Being able to understand this stuff on a whiteboard is EXTREMELY important for interviews. I know it seems harder, but this is a good skill to have that isn't really taught. Hats off to Prime for this doing this format.
I love how he dumps thoughts, like when he said "but what if they have children," it feels like they could have been my thoughts and he speaks my mind in an alternative universe. It's oddly rare.
Gibberish. If youre gonna share, share the full coursenin its entirety because the random clips have no context. This video starts randomly
BTW, by creating this course indirectly he just made interviews even more harder. Thank you.
The "Brazilian mentioned" broke me. LMAOOO!
Had to put Prime at 0.5x speed because I'm a smooth brained developer. I'm still lost but it helped a bit.
pretty straight forward *i have no idea wtf he is saying*
Prime not wearing a hoodie and screaming is so uncanny
he is wearing a hoodie though
@@wowvain2989 he is not in his ultimate form yet
It feels so good when you just empty your knowledge on a whiteboard. You just splash it on almost
I'll be honest guys, I have no f'in clue what the f is going on. Same as when taking those uni algo courses that made no sense how it would be applicable to real world problems, none.
Same here, why isn’t this on a computer?! The primagean on a whiteboard feels hard to follow, get this man a kenesis.
69 is a sex position.
Also, if you do stuff like searches through some data where you don't want to go through all the elements, and have recognised that some elements have some relationship, (Like DOM nodes in HTML), you'd use Tree algorithms.
Or Graphs if you want to find the "shortest path" if a very large NxM grid.... And many many other cases.
"Real world" really depends on what you work as well.
These algorithms make sense in Graphics Development, Game dev, Simulations, etc.
Not much sense in Backend Web Development. Good Frontend developers actually also are required to use these stuff if you want highly performant UIs if you're dealing with very large datasets.
I have to deal with one massive GIS app, which has been "fun" to solve.
He is assuming you have a lot of knowledge lol.
We have a use case, where in real time we need to make many calculation for the quickest routes based on different factors (like gps, vehicle speed, etc) to find out which drivers to contact. Existing libraries like graphhopper are helpful, but do not have all use cases, so we developers sometimes need to be able to do such calculations. Also sometimes existing libraries do have solutions for specific use cases, but are just to generic and slow, so we for good performance we need to implement custom solutions.
I highly recommend taking Colt Steele's course on data structures and algorithms on Udemy. He explains these concepts better than anyone i've seen. Prime is an excellent programmer but not the best at teaching what he knows
nice
Part one: m.th-cam.com/video/Lwr3-doAgaI/w-d-xo.html
The Algogen 🌞
I love this shit!
Video starts with 42, 69 and 420 nodes. That's all you have to know
Nice.
Nice
my Algorithm exam in uni is 2,5h from now wish me luck😅
Nice ...
"69?! 👇"
"nice " 😅😅
lets go!
Wait.... his eyes are blue??
Is it also free?
Sadly not
yes
Primeagen without hoodie ???????
Zero, zero, zero... Zero, one, one or two... Zero, two
Ahh takes me back to college
You can’t just hop onto a part 2 algo course without any prior and nag that you don’t understand anything. It’s not for you then.
Can’t just hop onto Ancient Egyptian Algebra and ace it.
sooo the "last algorithms course..." turns out to have NOT been the last. I want my money back! False advertising.
This makes me feel romantical
lol @1:49 nice
Wow he’s a beautiful husband.
yup that part was cringy af, are they marketing this for incels?
EARS
Nice 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
nice
Nice
Is this also free?
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