Exercism - Scala Exercises
openlibrary
Exercism - Scala Exercises | openlibrary | |
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399 | 409 | |
7,267 | 4,848 | |
0.2% | 1.3% | |
3.5 | 9.9 | |
2 months ago | 2 days ago | |
Python | ||
- | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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Exercism - Scala Exercises
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Developing Proficiency in Multiple Programming Languages: Part 1 - My Story
When I got my first job as a junior software engineer, my team lead suggested I take a course by MIT, Introduction to Computer Science and Programming Using Python to improve my fundamental knowledge of computer science. The course duration was 9 weeks and I learned a lot of theory about programming and picked up Python syntax. I liked the course and especially the exercises that were presented there. At that time I also discovered an amazing website called Exercism. I thought since I became familiar with the Python syntax and knew how to build simple apps, maybe it would be nice to explore some AI-related stuff. But after playing around with it I realized AI is really not for me. I'm not into analyzing data and everything that goes with it. I was more of an engineering and problem-solving type of developer.
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5 Websites to Boost Your Coding and Master Algorithms 🚀
Exercism
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MDN Curriculum
Nice, this reminds me of Exercism, which I wish was more widely known since they seem to be good folks. (disclaimer, I donate to them)
https://exercism.org/
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Do 48 Programming Challenges in 2024 #48in24
Exercism, the free programming learning platform has initiated a challenge named: 48in24.
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I learned* 12 languages in 2023: a retrospective
Last year, Exercism put together the #12in23 challenge. The goal was to learn a new programming language each month throughout the year. I was one of 135 people who completed the challenge, and I learned a lot along the way!
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12in24 - One language a month
The list of languages contains every language on Exercism, excluding ones that I've used before, web languages, or ones that I can't download for some reason.
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Ask HN: Programming Courses for Experienced Coders?
You might like https://exercism.org/
Learning by doing, with the help of mentors. Excellent way to learn a next language (as you are already familiar with the programming concepts).
- Any programs or websites to practice programming?
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Best platform for coding & programming testing everyday to improve coding skills in various language?
Exercism is pretty good for beginners with some programming language, they are open source and worth contributing to.
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Best Codewars for practice which have reflection in Web-Dev job.
Exercism
openlibrary
- Internet Archive: Open Library
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Ask HN: Anyone looking for contributors for their open source projects
I'd like to make a pitch for Openlibrary.org the free online library from Internet Archive that includes a fulltext search of millions of books.
I've been volunteering with them on and off for several years and it's always a lovely experience. Their backend is python and frontend mostly from python templates and some Vue for librarian stuff.
Every Tuesday they have a call on Zoom that everyone is welcome to join to share what they're working on, ask for help, and generally chat a bit. It's a great time.
Depending on what you're interested in there's a lot to do from helping build import pipelines for more book entries, writing bots to cleanup data, Performance improvements, better documenting public APIs, etc
I'm currently slowly working on a wikidata integration for their authors page. We also could use some help upgrading to Vue 3, mentors for Google summer of code would be helpful, find of ML projects needing help, moving away from old jQuery libraries, etc.
They can be quite responsive to PRs too like I blogged about here: https://blog.rayberger.org/idea-to-merged-in-less-than-30-mi...
For example, here's a small issue that could use some help on the python side: https://github.com/internetarchive/openlibrary/issues/8928
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Building an Open Source Decentralized E-Book Search Engine
OpenLibrary does provide search access to full texts. For example: https://openlibrary.org/search/inside?q=%22institutional+thi...
It is open source and they're always looking for contributors. I think they'd especially welcome help improving search!
https://github.com/internetarchive/openlibrary/
- Show HN: Mutable.ai – Turn your codebase into a Wiki
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MLIS books available digitally?
Check out https://openlibrary.org. You can search ´library science’, librarian’, etc, and something should come up. Just select the ‘ebooks’ option to search for items within the collection. And you can narrow the search by subject, etc.
- HMF a “legal” website to download books
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NaNoWriMo: National Novel Writing Month
Right now I'm in the middle of the chicken and the egg problem where we don't have enough authors cataloging their publications and b/c of that obviously readers are not interested in using the site.
I've gone back and forth with taking Open Libray's [0] catalog as that would at least flesh out our collection of books but then I'd have to deal with verifying authors to accounts so they can access their books. Which sounds like a major headache and also just defeats the concept of building a community.
Since this is really a weekend project, I'm just going to keep building the tools out to perfection and hope people will trickle in over time.
Luckily for me I just want to write, so the tools I'm building are exactly what works for my writing goals and I think overtime others will find the same value.
[0] https://openlibrary.org
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is there any way to read books for free?
Here's one: https://openlibrary.org/
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YSK: You can access many old and out of print hiking books from the Internet Archive's Open Library
The Internet Archive runs what they call the Open Library, which is a unique concept on the traditional library. You can sign-up with minimal details and digitally check out many scanned books from libraries all over the world. The only caveat is that almost all of the books are older editions - ones that would be impossible to find locally. It's great if you're looking for old routes, a look back in time, details about obscure areas, or just prefer to read a book rather than browse AllTrails. Please do still support local authors whenever you can as guidebooks take hundreds of hours to create and are slowly going extinct.
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🐍🐍 23 issues to grow yourself as an exceptional open-source Python expert 🧑💻 🥇
Repo : https://github.com/internetarchive/openlibrary
What are some alternatives?
Rustlings - :crab: Small exercises to get you used to reading and writing Rust code!
DeDRM_tools - DeDRM tools for ebooks
codewars.com - Issue tracker for Codewars
calibre - The official source code repository for the calibre ebook manager
devops-exercises - Linux, Jenkins, AWS, SRE, Prometheus, Docker, Python, Ansible, Git, Kubernetes, Terraform, OpenStack, SQL, NoSQL, Azure, GCP, DNS, Elastic, Network, Virtualization. DevOps Interview Questions
bypass-paywalls-chrome - Bypass Paywalls web browser extension for Chrome and Firefox.
Scala Exercises - The easy way to learn Scala.
launcher - Launcher for Flashpoint Archive
Demos and Examples in Scala (Chinese) - scala、spark使用过程中,各种测试用例以及相关资料整理
ArchiveBox - 🗃 Open source self-hosted web archiving. Takes URLs/browser history/bookmarks/Pocket/Pinboard/etc., saves HTML, JS, PDFs, media, and more...
interviews - Everything you need to know to get the job.
web - The source code for the Standard Ebooks website.