Le Wagon's Setup
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Le Wagon's Setup | HackerNews | |
---|---|---|
10 | 5 | |
17,915 | 428 | |
1.7% | - | |
6.5 | 3.5 | |
8 days ago | 8 months ago | |
Ruby | Swift | |
- | 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.
Le Wagon's Setup
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question about private schools to learn Computer science
Le Wagon They teach Web dev with Ruby and Data science with Python
- Reconversion professionnelle
- Career Decisions: Med vs Comp Sci (Please Help !)
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Coding Bootcamp or Language School (in Tokyo)
The one I'm considering is this. The reviews and searches on Reddit about it have been positive. https://www.lewagon.com/
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[WeWantOut] 33m, 31f, USA -> Germany, UK, EU
I did a coding bootcamp in London and cost considerably less than in the US (I work in the US now as a software dev), check them out they have locations all over Europe https://www.lewagon.com/
- Attending coding bootcamp in Berlin on schengen tourist visa?
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Career prospects after IT bootcamp for beginner?
My wife wants to change career. I work in the IT field, and she thought it looked like an interesting career, so I told her that bootcamps existed and we looked a few up. There are some you can take online, like Altcademy and others you can find directly in Switzerland, like Le Wagon .
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How do you determine if a bootcamp is legit and worth it?
I know a few people who attended and were very happy with Le Wagon in Tokyo. The program is specifically shorter and cheaper so all in all you'll end up spending about the same to live in a different country and the program is short enough that you won't even need to get a visa! I really wish I went this route many years ago rather than being self-taught.
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Learning code is hard!
Anyway, after some research, I discovered Le Wagon, an intensive nine weeks long coding bootcamp that was perfectly fitting my needs: a way to catch up quickly with the basics of The Code.
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Rails Install Help
Setting up a Rails developer environment is not that easy. I advise you to follow part of this coding school setup https://github.com/lewagon/setup/blob/master/macos.md
HackerNews
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Extracting Objects Recursively with Jq
A bit offtopic, but I don't see much people knowing/using the Algolia API[0]. It's much better to use than the HN official API[1], since it returns the whole tree data in one request.
Unfortunately (I guess this is a big reason why people don't use it), it doesn't sort the comments – if you need the orders, you'll have to parse HN HTML (or just use the official API).
Still just two requests (the HN site, the Algolia API) is much better than recursively requesting a hundred requests, so I use this approach in my client[2].
[0]: https://hn.algolia.com/api
[1]: https://github.com/HackerNews/API
[2]: https://github.com/goranmoomin/HackerNews
- macOS HackerNews client that aims to be a Mac-assed Mac app. Written in Swift + AppKit.
- Show HN: I developed a native macOS Hacker News client
- Show HN: I developed a native Cocoa Hacker News client
What are some alternatives?
yabai - A tiling window manager for macOS based on binary space partitioning
gojq - Pure Go implementation of jq
dot.me - me dot files
protonmail-macos - Experimental email client for the ProtonMail service written in Swift.
crouton - Chromium OS Universal Chroot Environment
jfq - JSONata on the command line
html-tui - HTML to TUI (Text user interface) renderer. It is like TurboVision but in pure HTML, CSS and JavaScript
benuse - An iOS widget-based HN reader
dot_files - My Shell configurations
fzf-checkout.vim - Manage branches and tags with fzf
setup - My config, system settings, utilities, etc.