handsonscala
project-based-tutorials-in-c
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handsonscala | project-based-tutorials-in-c | |
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18 | 38 | |
648 | 8,354 | |
1.7% | - | |
0.0 | 5.4 | |
5 months ago | over 2 years ago | |
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GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
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handsonscala
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Is Li Haoyi libs standard throught scala useres?
To dive into the lihaoyi ecosystem, I recommend the book https://www.handsonscala.com/ by lihaoyi himself.
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Contrary to popular belief, Scala is actually a quite small and simple language
I recommend people go through Hands-on Scala, by Li Haoyi, a fantastic developer in the Scala community.
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Good book for non-beginners in programming
The best practical book around Scala language features is https://www.handsonscala.com/
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Starting with scala
You can have a look at https://www.handsonscala.com/ and see if that's for you!
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Getting into Scala from Python
his book, https://www.handsonscala.com/
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Suggest me resources to learn Scala.
Hands-on Scala Programming
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How is Databricks' style guide viewed nowadays?
If you like Li Haoyi's style of Scala, his book is a good place to start (it's longer than just a Style guide, of course): https://www.handsonscala.com/
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Algorithms and Data Structures in Scala;
is there a great resource, book or libraryā€¨ on classic Algorithms and Data Structures in Scala, e.g. similar in scope and quality to Sedgewick Algorithms in Java https://algs4.cs.princeton.edu/home/ I found a very helpful section on algorithms implementation in /u/lihaoyi superb Hand-On Scala Programming book , but unfortunately it's only a few pages (p.107-121). And most other books provide algorithms just an illustration for some neat language feature. The thing is, to get a job as Scala developer these days (in competitive firms) one needs to be a competitive programmer, master of Leetcode, and Scala doesn't seem to have strong ecosystem in that regard as Java, Python or C++. Edit: in DIY spirit and as a learning exercise i'm thinking of translating Sedgewick Algorithms from Java to idiomatic functional Scala, if anyone wants to join this effort or aware of similar ones please let me know Edit 2 (in regards to comments on 'reinventing the wheel' below): if Scala is so great as a language and functional programming flagship, where are all the libraries of functionally implemented algorithms replacing conventional CLRS style imperative/mutable implementations?
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Need suggestions on where and how I can practice functional programming with Scala or in general programming in Scala. New to Scala.
handsonscala is a great read for programming in general using scala. Especially if you're the practical kind of learner.
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Scala at Scale at Databricks
I will toot the author's horn for him. He has a great series of Scala posts on his blog [1] and his book Hands-On Scala Programming [2] is a great introduction to building real applications with Scala so that any experienced developer can understand and extend them.
I work at a small company that has been using Scala for 7 years. Some of the prior employees clearly enjoyed playing with advanced language features and writing libraries for the most general possible case even when that made it hard to understand how they were used for the 2 actual cases we needed to address in our application code. Akka, Cats, and Shapeless were all over the place.
Those earlier employees have churned off to other places and I have successively simplified the code they wrote that is still useful, while encouraging the use of no more language power than necessary in new development. Hands-On Scala Programming is the book I give new hires as a language introduction that shows the sort of style to be preferred. It's much more like super-powered Python than like Haskell.
I have written C, JavaScript, Python, and Scala for money. When I started on Scala I had never written Java nor used any JVM language. I have come to really appreciate the rich ecosystem of JVM libraries, the instrumentation and profiling tools I get, and many aspects of the Scala language and standard library. I love Scala's collections and miss their power and ease when I'm writing Python. (Which I still do for certain scripting tasks and for accessing Python-ecosystem libraries.)
[1] https://www.lihaoyi.com/
[2] https://www.handsonscala.com/
project-based-tutorials-in-c
- Where can I learn C with hands-on practice?
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Solid Foundations C and Programming
My experience with "C Primer Plus" was a good one I found it very nicely explained, and it's wordy as it explains everything to the details, and with every example, there is a new programming idea. I don't know your studying technique but I suggest you implement every example by yourself. Nevertheless, you could give CS50 a try, it's without saying one of the best introductory courses, and also take a look at "Learn C the hard way" there are also videos accompanied by the book, which is pretty good in my opinion since you don't want something "wordy". And pick a project it will help you with your learning journey as learning without implementation is just half learning. - Project based learning - Project-based tutorials in C - Build your own X
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Collection of free books to learn C, java, python, bash, ethical hacking with python, oracle database.. i found today, (google drive link, +60MB)
Project based tutorials in C. This is awesome.
- What are some beginner level C programming projects?
- I have just finished learning basic C language. Now which problems should I solve? And any ideas for beginners project. Thank you.
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End of the year Resource collection
For those of you that so not know it already, there is a collection of C projects (ongoing and finished) by rby90 on GitHub
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Help in choosing C library
Usually you fit the library to the project, not the project to the library. Just pick something that interests you, maybe even re-do a C++ project in C instead. If you really need ideas, here is a list that can help you.
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Any website similar to Jetbrains Academy but for C?
Projects
- I learned basic and...
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Beginner projects
I recommend you have a look through this list for inspiration : https://github.com/rby90/project-based-tutorials-in-c
What are some alternatives?
WKHTMLToPDF - Convert HTML to PDF using Webkit (QtWebKit)
project-based-learning - Curated list of project-based tutorials
athenapdf - Drop-in replacement for wkhtmltopdf built on Go, Electron and Docker
DOOM - DOOM Open Source Release
jsPDF - Client-side JavaScript PDF generation for everyone.
mal - mal - Make a Lisp
algs4 - Algorithms in C# ported from the book "Algorithms 4th Edition".
project-based-learnin
kwkhtmltopdf - wkhtmltopdf server with transparent drop-in client
awesome-c - A curated list of awesome C frameworks, libraries, resources and other shiny things. Inspired by all the other awesome-... projects out there.
HexaPDF - Versatile PDF creation and manipulation for Ruby
app-ideas - A Collection of application ideas which can be used to improve your coding skills.