awesome-cheatsheets
javascript-algorithms
awesome-cheatsheets | javascript-algorithms | |
---|---|---|
30 | 118 | |
37,613 | 182,992 | |
- | - | |
5.0 | 5.0 | |
12 days ago | 22 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
awesome-cheatsheets
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2024 Cheat Sheet Collection
Awesome Cheat Sheets: This curated list of cheat sheets covers a wide range of topics, including programming languages, frameworks, databases, and more, making it a valuable resource for developers of all levels.
- Good coding groups for black women?
- Cool Github repositories for Everyone
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Updated OpenSSL Cheat Sheet (v1.7) and 1000 free seats to Udemy OpenSSL Course
The best way to use Github if you're not directly looking for software to run, i.e. looking for informational resources is to search for "awesome lists" (And sort by number of stars.) https://github.com/onlurking/awesome-infosec https://github.com/LeCoupa/awesome-cheatsheets 👍
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Cheat sheets to Streamline the Development Process
Bash
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IT Pro Tuesday #224 - Whiteboard Converter, Reporting Platform, Code Searching & More
Awesome-Cheatsheets is a set of cheatsheets for various popular programming languages, frameworks and development tools. Each was created as a single file to include all the essential things you should know when working with that topic. Kindly shared by ioah86.
- Awesome cheatsheets for popular programming languages, frameworks and development tools. Covers frontend, backend, programming languages, databases, and tools.
- crow
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😲 My Top 5 List of Resources that I Wish I Knew When I Started Programming
I start my day off by picking an article to read from daily.dev, scrolling through my Tech Twitter feed, just to finally become productive again and begin programming while referring to my roadmap and my cheat-sheets.
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linus torbalds tec tips
I've found a nice bash cheatsheet: https://github.com/LeCoupa/awesome-cheatsheets/blob/master/languages/bash.sh
javascript-algorithms
- 10 GitHub Repos for Mastering JavaScript
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Minecraft Grub Theme
I'm reminded of the time when some kid wrote a script to crawl GitHub and create issues[1] about using inclusive language... except it was really dumb, for example: https://github.com/trekhleb/javascript-algorithms/pull/875/f...
[1] E.g.: https://github.com/EbookFoundation/free-programming-books/pu...
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is there any website that you can practise javascript from complete beginning to mastery
Try codewars or leetcode Or you can use this repo for ds practice https://github.com/trekhleb/javascript-algorithms
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Is anyone interested in contributing to Ultimate Guide to Algorithm opensource together?
This one is pretty popular too.
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Help! Prep for interview in 2 weeks
for algos - not sure how much you'll need to do for a jr position but familiarity with some of the beginner stuff here couldn't hurt: https://github.com/trekhleb/javascript-algorithms
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JavaScript-algorithms: Algorithms and data structures implemented in JavaScript
Traditionally, a linked list allows you to insert before/after a node. i.e. addBefore(node,value) (see [2] ) He doesn't implement addBefore & addAfter.
Instead, he provides a whole bunch of non-canonical helpers like reverse(), toArray(), deleteTail() etc - these are typical LC-Easy problems that don't belong inside the data structure.
My own introduction to these things was a C course called "Data Structures in C" in the traditional CS curriculum, and yes, you would have to malloc a new node, get back a pointer with a memory address, & the process of pointing the next pointer of the current node to this new node so that the memory address of the next value was explicitly "linked" to the current value and hence linked list etc...I guess much of that terminology is lost on the new generation in the absence of pointers & memory addresses.
The canonical exercise in those days was - Show that a linked list does not store objects in contiguous memory, unlike an array. So to solve this, you would traverse the list from the head node & print the actual addresses of the memory locations along the way, proving that the vals aren't stored contiguously. I wonder what that exercise would mean in JS land.
That said, yeah its a good starting point & I applaud the effort.
[1]https://github.com/trekhleb/javascript-algorithms/blob/maste...
- 30 March 2023 - Daily Chat Thread
What are some alternatives?
coding-interview-university - A complete computer science study plan to become a software engineer.
Dlib - A toolkit for making real world machine learning and data analysis applications in C++
You-Dont-Know-JS - A book series on JavaScript. @YDKJS on twitter.
javascript-es2020-sandbox - This is a place for me to screw around some code and will be the home of my future JavaScript ES2020 Cheat Sheet
cheat-sheet-pdf - 📜 A Cheat-Sheet Collection from the WWW
developer-roadmap - Interactive roadmaps, guides and other educational content to help developers grow in their careers.
zero-ui - ZeroUI - ZeroTier Controller Web UI - is a web user interface for a self-hosted ZeroTier network controller.
clean-code-javascript - :bathtub: Clean Code concepts adapted for JavaScript
p1xt-guides - Programming curricula
free-for-dev - A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev
cv-generator-app-reactjs - CV generator app developed using ReactJS, Express JS, NodeJS and Mongo Db.