Hi there, java is also good to start. What I want to express is: programing language is entry to the computer science. If you want to go further in CS, no matter what language you choose, you can always get there. Good luck with you java learning!
So the whole video has been about learning python but for goodness sake, this is exactly what AI can do. So in the end I think there is no concrete answer, the video is a broken promise
I would like to ask how you prep for interviews and questions .esp Technical questions, how do you recommend for no cs background and for junior role for backend dev for international job market as for me I live in APAC
Hi there. Thanks for the questions. I think interview prep is different from area to area. I've no specific suggestions for the are that I'm not quite familiar. But one thing I would recommend is "keep honest and open during the interview". When doing the interview, what interviewer more interested is how interviewee thinking about the problem and find the solution. It's totally ok if interviewee forgot the details like syntax of priority queue in Python. But it's more important to demonstrate how to find the solution based on the given information. Hope this helps :)
Can you provide information from where we can learn all this stuff online? Are there good courses, books, TH-cam videos for these topics to follow step by step?
Hi there, I found the resources in this site are helpful! teachyourselfcs.com/ I will also have videos to cover these topics. Please subscribe and tune in :) Thanks!
GO is also a good choice. I think programing language is just a path to get into deeper of programing word. Different language just a different path. Good luck with your GO journey!
Hi there. sorry I cannot provide specific career suggestion based on the information I have. But blockchain is also an interesting area, depends on what you really want :)
I have just started learning to code using Python, a few days ago, and I build a game using conditions... it is so fun to code and build something original from scratch. However, my question is: What is the point of coding when AI can write codes for any program instantly?? could you please answer??
Hi hi. Glad you enjoyed your coding experience. In most of cases, coding is for building things for others. For example, building a website for small business to help them to reach more potential customers. That's one aspect of coding impact our real world. Given we are having standard ways to build up such simple applications, AI is perfect tool to plug in such scenarios. And replace human to do such tedious process. However, what if we hit issue with the Python itself? Or, if we as AI to build website with Flask, but there is underline issue with Flask itself? Without understanding of programing, it would be even hard for us to ask AI about what we met. That's why I think learning still needed today and AI should be tool for us to success, not make us as reality extension of AI.
@@codingdinosaur Thank you very much for the detailed answer. So your advice to me is just to continue learning to code despite the terrifying progress of AI?
Yes! There is no harm to keep learning new things! I know AI's progress is terrifying. But AI can help human to push the limit only if human know the what's current limit.
Hi there, I found the resources in this site are helpful! teachyourselfcs.com I will also have videos to cover these topics. Please subscribe and tune in :) Thanks!
I’m literally going to start in first month of 2025 I’m almost 19 and watched videos did a lil of freecodecamp got great. I didn’t know what I was doing practically just asked my AI every single answer or what’s the next step. Don’t understand how I am supposed to learn something if I don’t know how to learn it.
Hi there, welcome to the coding world! Glad you take AI as your learning assistant. That's actually good. Even thought I don't know what project or tech stack you are working on, the suggestion I can give is "ask why/what one more time". For example, if AI tell you how to fix an null pointer exception, you may follow up with question "why there is an exception" or "what's null pointer exception" I know it's feeling bad don't know how to learn. But keep going, you get it !
Bro what would you suggest me to learn as I'm a first semester student of software engineering, as we are learning HTML, CSS, JS, C++, and Python, so which language should I mainly shift my focus.
I would suggest start with Python to get more sense around coding. It really helpful to ramp up in coding area. Then switch to C++ while learning OS etc. C++ is basic enough to get more idea about how OS/hardware works.
@@codingdinosaur But the problem sir, the syntax of C++ is way too complicated than Python so shifting from Python to C++ isn't such a great idea. I would consider if one wants to start learning a language, one should pick a language that has core basics of most languages so as to adopt to others. Such languages with core fundamentals of most languages in the tech industry include Java, C++, C, C# e.t.c *It's just a recommendation, not criticising opinions
Bruhh what should i do in my college teachers are bad a d they are focusing on completing the syllabus...i am studying C right now.but can't find a perfect video..
Hi there. Sorry to hear that you are not getting well with your teachers. I would suggest not only from video if you cannot find things perfect for you. Word based materials sometimes better. C is actually good if you get familiar with it. It will leads you to know more about hardware etc. Its learning curve is high, but you will find it worth when you get into it more.
@@codingdinosaur gotta think to learn hehe but fr I feel OP. It hasn't been until recently when I went all in to study how everything is changing that I started getting a clearer vision of how to navigate this change. I started reading a book by Daniel H. Pink "A Whole New Mind" which has given me so many ideas and insights from research I couldn't have possibly done myself. It truly let me see in real time how times are changing and how we can leverage AI to our advantage, as well as how to become valuable in the rising age "the conceptual age"...
As a software engineer, I would currently avoid getting a CS degree unless you have coded from your childhood or have a guaranteed job secured already. Without major connections it's nearly impossible to find work. Know many of my graduate year who are or afe becoming homeless because they picked a very terrible year to graduate. Tens of thousands pf applicants fight from scraps. Hopefully 3-years from ow it'll be a lot better but currently I'd advice against it. I hate to say it but it's brutal honesty.
@@Narutoo2006 99% of all CS employees are people who have been within the industry for >=5 years. Over 90% of all job listings are also jobs that will only consider that demographic. Sort from the overall situation on how many of them are seniors and how many are graduates. As many companies openly say, they have not hired juniors for years anymore. There are articles upon articles of all kinds of senior developers, CEO's, tech industry insiders etc. talking about these issues. Tens if not hundreds of videos from graduates, students and senior developer alike here on TH-cam alone talking about this issue and what to do about it. Heck in my country just the other week I applied to our national airplane companies IT-department job, and according to the company there were +2 500 applicants per each job enlisting. If we normalize population size differences to US, that is the numerical equivalent of ~117 000 applicants for that one job listing. Even our national statistics center noted that among some of the hardest hit industries for unemployment has been software engineering and metal engineering. Roughly 30% of all software engineers nationwide have been laid off in my country, and in the city (one of the biggest local cities in my country), statistically 53% of all software jobs have disappeared in the past 2-3 years. So yeah, it's not just some minor anomaly by any means. Many industry figures think it's partially driven due to misaligned belief on the capabilities of LLM models of AI like ChatGTP, partially due to global economic circumstance, partially aftershock from Covid-19 and partially simply a cascading effect where they see other companies laying off employees, so they follow suit as well. We are social creatures after all. Monkey see, monkey do; follow the captain. The good news is there are signs of minor and slow but steady growth after the roughest year within the industry since the early 90's recession. Until then if you are considering CS: Don't. If you still do, then rely on relatives or whomever you can for financial support because chances of your employment are next to none for many years to come. But it will not be like this forever and when that day comes, I will begin recommending CS once again. But until that day, you'll be better off studying trades, economics or petty much any other hard science. Heck I myself have +2-years of work experience, several fullstack RestAPI examples in my portfolio, I have a lot of connections within the industry and any developer and industry insider I've spoken with have said I have an impressive portfolio, and yet out of over a thousands of applications last year, I've gotten 3-job interviews but lost to very experienced developers every time, only getting close to getting a job. Now imagine being like most graduates who barely have any experience and average or no portfolio. Yeah, good luck with that.
Strange 🤔! I didn't subscriber this channel and I don't even remember watching any of this channel's videos but still how I got notification of this video ? And on the 4th day after upload? What's going on? 😮
Hi there, sorry I cannot provide career suggestions based on the information I have. I guess the answer is really depends on how much time you can put if you self-teach
Nice tips!! And great workspace too 😁
Thanks! We spend quite some time setting it up😉
Like number 1000! thank you for your tips.
Wow! Thanks for supporting!!
Still learning with python my first language programming keep practicing thanks a lot ❤
Keep it up and good luck!
Great bro
Thanks for the tips Brody
Glad you like it
Great video👍
Glad you liked it!
Quality of this video is very good, I’m happy you created this video! Hope you the best🎉
Thank you so much!! Glad you liked video!
Thank you. Subscribed 👍
Appreciate the support! Hope you enjoy the video!
This was very helpful. Thank you.
Appreciate it! Glad you liked it.
Great Video!!
Appreciate it! Glad you liked it.
Great Video! My Gua bro.🤪
Thanks Liang bro! 🤖
Great tips ❣
Glad you like it
I'm learning clarity programming language for stacks blockchain. I just started but I'm finding it interesting
That's cool! Glad you find something you are interested in!
Why there is rock’s photo in the muddle of google sign 💀
I really don’t know😂 but I feel so safe when I see the Rock “inside” Google
hi, what about java? I don't mind learning a more difficult language, so maybe in the long run it could help me. Congratulations on your career!
Hi there, java is also good to start. What I want to express is: programing language is entry to the computer science.
If you want to go further in CS, no matter what language you choose, you can always get there. Good luck with you java learning!
So the whole video has been about learning python but for goodness sake, this is exactly what AI can do. So in the end I think there is no concrete answer, the video is a broken promise
I am software engineering student and I am learning from teachmyselfcs. Thanks for the advice.
Keep learning! Good luck on your journey!
Perfect, Keep learning, Good luck.
I would like to ask how you prep for interviews and questions .esp
Technical questions, how do you recommend for no cs background and for junior role for backend dev for international job market as for me I live in APAC
Hi there. Thanks for the questions.
I think interview prep is different from area to area. I've no specific suggestions for the are that I'm not quite familiar.
But one thing I would recommend is "keep honest and open during the interview". When doing the interview, what interviewer more interested is how interviewee thinking about the problem and find the solution. It's totally ok if interviewee forgot the details like syntax of priority queue in Python. But it's more important to demonstrate how to find the solution based on the given information.
Hope this helps :)
Nice video broo
Glad you like it!!
Can you provide information from where we can learn all this stuff online? Are there good courses, books, TH-cam videos for these topics to follow step by step?
Hi there, I found the resources in this site are helpful! teachyourselfcs.com/
I will also have videos to cover these topics. Please subscribe and tune in :) Thanks!
How about starting with GO? Thank you.
GO is also a good choice. I think programing language is just a path to get into deeper of programing word. Different language just a different path. Good luck with your GO journey!
how blockchain dev? can start my journey to this industry?
Hi there. sorry I cannot provide specific career suggestion based on the information I have. But blockchain is also an interesting area, depends on what you really want :)
I have just started learning to code using Python, a few days ago, and I build a game using conditions... it is so fun to code and build something original from scratch. However, my question is: What is the point of coding when AI can write codes for any program instantly?? could you please answer??
Hi hi. Glad you enjoyed your coding experience.
In most of cases, coding is for building things for others. For example, building a website for small business to help them to reach more potential customers. That's one aspect of coding impact our real world. Given we are having standard ways to build up such simple applications, AI is perfect tool to plug in such scenarios. And replace human to do such tedious process.
However, what if we hit issue with the Python itself? Or, if we as AI to build website with Flask, but there is underline issue with Flask itself? Without understanding of programing, it would be even hard for us to ask AI about what we met. That's why I think learning still needed today and AI should be tool for us to success, not make us as reality extension of AI.
@@codingdinosaur Thank you very much for the detailed answer. So your advice to me is just to continue learning to code despite the terrifying progress of AI?
@@codingdinosaurthat is precisely why i am learning programming
Yes! There is no harm to keep learning new things! I know AI's progress is terrifying. But AI can help human to push the limit only if human know the what's current limit.
@@codingdinosaur Thank you very much.
Hey man great video. any specific online lectures recommendation from you on the topics mentioned. TIA
Hi there, I found the resources in this site are helpful! teachyourselfcs.com
I will also have videos to cover these topics. Please subscribe and tune in :) Thanks!
I’m literally going to start in first month of 2025 I’m almost 19 and watched videos did a lil of freecodecamp got great. I didn’t know what I was doing practically just asked my AI every single answer or what’s the next step. Don’t understand how I am supposed to learn something if I don’t know how to learn it.
Take the 100 days of code on udemy by angela yu.
Hi there, welcome to the coding world! Glad you take AI as your learning assistant. That's actually good. Even thought I don't know what project or tech stack you are working on, the suggestion I can give is "ask why/what one more time". For example, if AI tell you how to fix an null pointer exception, you may follow up with question "why there is an exception" or "what's null pointer exception"
I know it's feeling bad don't know how to learn. But keep going, you get it !
brother what monitor do u hv their
LG 27UK 850. It’s a good one
Is AI Replace software engineer job, should i change field from software engineer to other?
AI will impact software engineer job market, but will definitely not replace all engineers.
Thank you
You're welcome! Hope you enjoyed the video.
Thanks!
Appreciate that!
thanks bro
Appreciate that! Hope you enjoyed the video.
Bro what would you suggest me to learn as I'm a first semester student of software engineering, as we are learning HTML, CSS, JS, C++, and Python, so which language should I mainly shift my focus.
I would suggest start with Python to get more sense around coding. It really helpful to ramp up in coding area.
Then switch to C++ while learning OS etc. C++ is basic enough to get more idea about how OS/hardware works.
@@codingdinosaur But the problem sir, the syntax of C++ is way too complicated than Python so shifting from Python to C++ isn't such a great idea. I would consider if one wants to start learning a language, one should pick a language that has core basics of most languages so as to adopt to others.
Such languages with core fundamentals of most languages in the tech industry include Java, C++, C, C# e.t.c
*It's just a recommendation, not criticising opinions
Subbed
Any resource to learn DSA with python. I know js but i cant't find dsa with javascript. By the way where u learn DSA pls help
Bruhh what should i do in my college teachers are bad a d they are focusing on completing the syllabus...i am studying C right now.but can't find a perfect video..
From which college?
@nikeshsingh2081 in India
Hi there. Sorry to hear that you are not getting well with your teachers.
I would suggest not only from video if you cannot find things perfect for you. Word based materials sometimes better.
C is actually good if you get familiar with it. It will leads you to know more about hardware etc. Its learning curve is high, but you will find it worth when you get into it more.
@@codingdinosaur Thank you for your suggestion man.
Look for brian Kernighan's C programming language book.
I think I will learn FORTRAN.
man I'm so demotivated😢😢
Don't worry too much bro. How about let just start learning without thinking too much
@@codingdinosaur gotta think to learn hehe
but fr I feel OP. It hasn't been until recently when I went all in to study how everything is changing that I started getting a clearer vision of how to navigate this change.
I started reading a book by Daniel H. Pink "A Whole New Mind" which has given me so many ideas and insights from research I couldn't have possibly done myself. It truly let me see in real time how times are changing and how we can leverage AI to our advantage, as well as how to become valuable in the rising age "the conceptual age"...
As a software engineer, I would currently avoid getting a CS degree unless you have coded from your childhood or have a guaranteed job secured already. Without major connections it's nearly impossible to find work. Know many of my graduate year who are or afe becoming homeless because they picked a very terrible year to graduate. Tens of thousands pf applicants fight from scraps. Hopefully 3-years from ow it'll be a lot better but currently I'd advice against it. I hate to say it but it's brutal honesty.
cs is 7 percent unemployment
why are you say that you must work hard to get a job in every fields
@@Narutoo2006 99% of all CS employees are people who have been within the industry for >=5 years. Over 90% of all job listings are also jobs that will only consider that demographic. Sort from the overall situation on how many of them are seniors and how many are graduates.
As many companies openly say, they have not hired juniors for years anymore. There are articles upon articles of all kinds of senior developers, CEO's, tech industry insiders etc. talking about these issues. Tens if not hundreds of videos from graduates, students and senior developer alike here on TH-cam alone talking about this issue and what to do about it.
Heck in my country just the other week I applied to our national airplane companies IT-department job, and according to the company there were +2 500 applicants per each job enlisting. If we normalize population size differences to US, that is the numerical equivalent of ~117 000 applicants for that one job listing. Even our national statistics center noted that among some of the hardest hit industries for unemployment has been software engineering and metal engineering. Roughly 30% of all software engineers nationwide have been laid off in my country, and in the city (one of the biggest local cities in my country), statistically 53% of all software jobs have disappeared in the past 2-3 years.
So yeah, it's not just some minor anomaly by any means. Many industry figures think it's partially driven due to misaligned belief on the capabilities of LLM models of AI like ChatGTP, partially due to global economic circumstance, partially aftershock from Covid-19 and partially simply a cascading effect where they see other companies laying off employees, so they follow suit as well. We are social creatures after all. Monkey see, monkey do; follow the captain.
The good news is there are signs of minor and slow but steady growth after the roughest year within the industry since the early 90's recession. Until then if you are considering CS: Don't. If you still do, then rely on relatives or whomever you can for financial support because chances of your employment are next to none for many years to come. But it will not be like this forever and when that day comes, I will begin recommending CS once again. But until that day, you'll be better off studying trades, economics or petty much any other hard science.
Heck I myself have +2-years of work experience, several fullstack RestAPI examples in my portfolio, I have a lot of connections within the industry and any developer and industry insider I've spoken with have said I have an impressive portfolio, and yet out of over a thousands of applications last year, I've gotten 3-job interviews but lost to very experienced developers every time, only getting close to getting a job. Now imagine being like most graduates who barely have any experience and average or no portfolio. Yeah, good luck with that.
I am from India which language is good for make a good carrier ??
I think C/C++ is good for explore deeply in computer science. But Python is definitely the best for beginners
Bro we are still in 2024😢
We have 2 month to setup mindset 😂
He is living in the future 😂
😂😂😂
nice
Glad you like it!
Strange 🤔!
I didn't subscriber this channel and I don't even remember watching any of this channel's videos but still how I got notification of this video ?
And on the 4th day after upload? What's going on? 😮
Btw great video ❤
Glad you like it. I'm not sure why you get notification. But I think it's not a bad mistake lol
@@codingdinosaur ya it wasn't
Plus you've got one more subscriber ✨
i would like to work with you ...😄
im 28 Is age an impediment to learning programming
Learning programming will never impacted by age!! Wish you good luck with your journey
🧑💻👑🎙️🧔✨
thank you Elon Musk
Elon: 🚀🚀🚀
AI will replace programmers who do not use AI as a tool.
Definitely
Do you think i should go to college or self teach?
Hi there, sorry I cannot provide career suggestions based on the information I have. I guess the answer is really depends on how much time you can put if you self-teach