TheAlgorithms
build-your-own-x
TheAlgorithms | build-your-own-x | |
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62 | 164 | |
179,812 | 141,173 | |
1.5% | - | |
9.7 | 2.5 | |
5 days ago | almost 2 years ago | |
Python | ||
MIT License | - |
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TheAlgorithms
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Top 10 GitHub Repositories for Python and Java Developers
3. TheAlgorithms/Python - For those interested in algorithms and data structures, this repository offers Python implementations for a wide range of algorithms. It's a great way to deepen understanding of algorithmic learning with Python. https://github.com/TheAlgorithms/Python
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Wikifunctions
Is it me or does it not seem very well thought out? Every example I've seen only has implementations in JavaScript and/or Python. I haven't seen any other languages nor a way to search by language. What a "string" means in one language can be completely different in another language. The primitive data types that the project assumes are not really supported across all programming languages.
Also if anyone hasn't already seen them, similar projects already exist and are more complete. E.g.
* https://rosettacode.org/
* https://programming-idioms.org/
* https://the-algorithms.com/
Not to mention LeetCode, CodeWars, Project Euler, Exercism can kinda serve the same role.
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Introduction
Hey Everyone, My name is Rachit Chawla and Its my first blog on dev.to. I am currently a student of Computer Programming and Analysis at Seneca College. Also I'm currently on my co-op term working as an Automation Developer at Ontario Public Service. In this role, I am currently working with PowerShell scripting and Microsoft Azure for automating every manual tasks to reduce workload and increase efficiency. This blog is a part of OSD600 course at Seneca College. I am taking this course as I am big fan of open source and always wanted to contribute in open source projects but I am unaware of proper documentation and standards used for open source contributions. I am hoping to learn all the required stuff by the end of this course and I aim to be one of the 15k contributors to Linux's repo by Linus Torvald. Open Source interests me because it gives developers the power to customise the application they want to use, also a chance to help others and improve their skills. I found https://github.com/TheAlgorithms/Python interesting from the Monthly trending feed on Github as it has all the algorithms which help us improve time complexity and write better codes. I has about 1000 contributors which helped to code all the algorithms in Python which may help others for working or learning purposes. I myself was a student of Data Structures and Algorithms in Python Winter 2023 and hoping to even able to contribute to this repo itself, once I learn more about documentation & proper standards to be followed.
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I am studying my college Python so can I learn algorithms from it?
The Algorithms Contains many open source implementations of algorithms. Check it out.
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Where To Read About Python Algos?
If you want to see implementations of all possible traversal algorithms you can find it here.
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Book of pythonic code
The mother load of all algorithms in python is here. dfs/bfs in particular are in the graph section.
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Any tips to improve my coding abilites ?
There is no one way to learn all these but here are some resources: 1. Gooking algorithms [https://edu.anarcho-copy.org/Algorithm/grokking-algorithms-illustrated-programmers-curious.pdf\] 2. Algorithms in all languages [https://the-algorithms.com/] 3. Node js best practices. [https://github.com/goldbergyoni/nodebestpractices] 4. Refactoring [https://refactoring.guru/] 5. Learn about Clean Code and Clean Architecture from uncle bob. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NeXQEJNWO5w&ab_channel=StreamAConStreamingConferences
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Self taught developers: where are you in your journey?
DSA basics
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Algo and data structures
I would recommend The Algorithms, it comes with descriptions and examples in multiple programming languages.
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A site that hosts implementations of various programming algorithms in different languages
There's also The Algorithms. Many implementations are unfortunately low quality. The Lua ones (disclaimer: I wrote them) should be fine however.
build-your-own-x
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Ask HN: Project based books/courses for C++?
https://github.com/danistefanovic/build-your-own-x
- Simplemente aplique
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Ask HN: What are some books where the reader learns by building projects?
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22299180
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13660086
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26039706
Other resources:
https://github.com/danistefanovic/build-your-own-x
https://github.com/AlgoryL/Projects-from-Scratch
https://github.com/tuvtran/project-based-learning
All suggestions are welcome,thanks in advance
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Some healthy advice for those of you learning to code
Make sure that apart from learning you're using the knowledge to create something either your own idea or maybe something from https://github.com/danistefanovic/build-your-own-x (with your own twist if possible.). It helps a lot to be working on something separately and seeing the results of your new knowledge outside of a tutorial scenario.
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Top 50 Useful GitHub Repos That Every Developer Should Follow
28. Build your own X
- Project ideas
- Hello
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I finished learncpp and The C++ Programming Language, 4th Edition. What next?
Do some projects. Come up with your own ideas or pick something from a list like https://github.com/danistefanovic/build-your-own-x
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guidance/pathway suggestions for learning pyhton?
ello! i'm 20f and humanities student (ir/poli sci) with interest in coding since high school, but just now i have the time to start learning it. i opted for learning pyhton first mostly because i'm interested in automation, data analysis, plus was skimming over the tutorials of build your own x and was surprised that you can do a lot of things with just pyhton.
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C++ exercises?
As for exercises there are plenty of programming task websites out there, most of them are quite boring but you can use a fun one like https://adventofcode.com/ . However the best things to work on are things you actually like so do some small projects. Games (start with command line stuff like hang-man) are common, otherwise pick something from https://github.com/danistefanovic/build-your-own-x or whatever else ideas come to your mind.
What are some alternatives?
python-ds - No non-sense and no BS repo for how data structure code should be in Python - simple and elegant.
project-based-learning - Curated list of project-based tutorials
new-world-fishing-bot - user friendly python script who is able to catch fish in the game New World
computer-science - :mortar_board: Path to a free self-taught education in Computer Science!
python-patterns - A collection of design patterns/idioms in Python
tech-interview-handbook - 💯 Curated coding interview preparation materials for busy software engineers
algorithms
system-design-primer - Learn how to design large-scale systems. Prep for the system design interview. Includes Anki flashcards.
more-itertools - More routines for operating on iterables, beyond itertools
honggfuzz - Security oriented software fuzzer. Supports evolutionary, feedback-driven fuzzing based on code coverage (SW and HW based)
ClointFusion - Cloint India Pvt. Ltd's (ClointFusion) Pythonic RPA (Automation) Platform
Daily-Coding-DS-ALGO-Practice - A open source project🚀 for bringing all interview💥💥 and competative📘 programming💥💥 question under one repo📐📐