system-design-primer
computer-science
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system-design-primer | computer-science | |
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380 | 1,081 | |
253,398 | 162,733 | |
- | 2.6% | |
0.0 | 7.7 | |
6 days ago | 19 days ago | |
Python | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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system-design-primer
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10 GitHub repositories that every developer must follow
✅ donnemartin/system-design-primer: https://github.com/donnemartin/system-design-primer
- FAANG - Guia Descomplicado de Entrevistas - parte 2
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10 GitHub Repos to Become a Better Backend Developer
View on GitHub
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[Need Recommendation] System design concepts based repos that provide bird's-eye-view
I've been giving interviews for past couple of months and this github repo has helped me so much for system design perspective and I can see myself excelling at interviews. - https://github.com/donnemartin/system-design-primer
- GitHub – system-design-primer: Learn how to design large-scale systems
- FLaNK Stack Weekly for 30 Oct 2023
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Getting ACL surgery in two day and pretty nervous.
You'll be on opiod's probably the first 1-2 days, so sleeping should be fine. Everything will be allright, don't worry too much. Just use the time now to prepare for the time after, make sure you go through post-surgery-essentials thread. Once you are out of the OR you won't have the energy to think about those details, so make sure you take that prep serious.
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Tool decision - What architecture would you choose and why?
Tooling isn’t architecture. Figure out what you need to handle both personas and volume/throughput and then lay out the capabilities you’ll need. As you lay out points of ingress, egress, consumption you can start to lay out sequences(think in persona and sequence diagrams to express interactions between services). Lastly, evaluate tools that offer some of these capabilities and weigh the trade-offs (there are always trade-offs: https://github.com/donnemartin/system-design-primer).
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Is there an EU country which I might work there being an average non-EU developer
[1] https://github.com/donnemartin/system-design-primer [2] https://www.teamblind.com/post/My-Approach-to-System-Design-V4SJARdx
computer-science
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My experience on the Public Speaking Challenge
Last year I discovered the DEV Community and since then this has been my favorite place to learn, share my learning journey, participate in challenges, and meet new people. I love to spend time in #discussion, debating about something, on "Welcome Thread" and moderating some novices and beginners posts too. On April 1st, @bekahhw from Virtual Coffee made a post inviting anyone in the community to join a challenge of Public Speaking. The main idea was to choose a topic, develop a well-structured and engaging talk, and present it at the end of the month, all the process was guided by the community with tips and tasks for each week. I loved the idea and was so excited about it. For the first week, I've chosen my topic, I'd like to talk a bit about Linux and open-source projects. Things like studying OS, testing a new distro on my desktop, and completely diving into the OSSU (Open Source Society University) influenced my choices directly. Then, I had to face one of my biggest difficulties, writing an outline with an introduction, development, and conclusion. For this presentation, each participant had 5-10 minutes to a lighting talk and I was afraid of writing something so superficial without connection or with big jumps between subtopics. As a non-native English speaker, I made an immersive month to get even more used to the language, listen to more music, watching even more videos (especially with my boyfriend whose have helped me so much with this and our long talks about OS and Kernels). In the last week, the focus was on delivering and I did my best to don't get nervous and just try to face this as a normal talk. I have to admit that I loved to spend time creating a slide presentation like I did a lot in my Physics Bachelor for countless experiments and projects. I have searched a lot about the Virtual Coffee community and I loved the main idea of mutual support and the meeting styles. Also, I'm on the waiting list and I hope to be in the Lightning Talks in the next year and join more and more challengers. As how I promised, here's my presentation video:
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Show HN: I made a cheaper alternative to college-level math and physics tutoring
There is a Discord server for the OSSU computer science cirriculum that is pretty active. https://github.com/ossu/computer-science
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Final project took me longer than expected, but I got there in the end.
For a well-rounded CS knowledge you might want to look into OSSU, which is designed to meet the requirements for univerisity CS courses.
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Learning coding
There’s also a compiled CS curriculum here: https://github.com/ossu/computer-science.
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Is codecademy worth it and where else can I learn
OP I hate to double comment and be "that guy who learned to code without going to college who MUST he did it the correct way" cause fuck "that guy". He's annoying, and he never shuts up, and I try really hard not to be that guy.... But I wanna provide some extra reasons I feel you should stay away from Code Academy. And as I said before, not because they're bad courses, so let me be that guy just for a brief moment. In addition to random Youtubers straight up having high quality courses that are much more update date, they often have supplemental tutorials on niche things that aren't covered in a "101 course". But even then, maybe the idea of a certificate on your resume appeals to you... Well, turns out there's more "academic" courses online you can do to get more of those things that self-taught dumbasses like me aren't as strong with because we skipped the "academic" part of learning..... If that's what makes Code Academy appealing (which I don't think they even go over much.... but still)... then here's 2 things I'd look at before pulling out your wallet. Here's Harvards entire introduction to Computer Science courses provided for anyone to take for free (you can pay for a certificate, but its straight up $0.00 to take the classes) Heres a github repo for an Open Source University that a ton of devs have curated to give a simulated full degree program If you want to focus hardcore on being a Web Developer and are frustrated by there not being tutorials that show you exactly how to handle every step from "there's no website on my computer" to "holy shit I made a website", then here you go The Odin Project is an Open Source answer to your cries of frustration. It has curriculum paths that do exactly that. The goal is to go from zero programming knowledge to fully employable as a web developer (by skill level at least, obviously you'll need to build stuff and build a resume)
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CMV: People should not be referred to as "Engineers" unless they have a degree in the appropriate field
That said, I'm a software developer and I don't see any point in the distinction of calling someone a software or computer engineer based on education (with the exception of electronics engineers that work on hardware, but here I'm talking about software). A BSc or BEng in computer science or software development can give you a headstart but nothing that can't be self taught and in hiring I've been shocked by many postgrad engineers that couldn't answer simple questions and were outdone by self taught engineers. Make no mistake though - education is required (e.g. you're not going to learn data structures and algorithms through osmosis), but it doesn't have to be formalised as a degree.
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After finishing cs50 python, what’s next? What did everybody do? I see there’s an ai course in python.. but not sure if im ready for that yet..
My plan is to follow the training program that the OSSU (Open Source Society University) provides in order to really delve into the topic and learn more. Check out this link for more info: https://github.com/ossu/computer-science
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NÃO QUERO FICAR PARA TRÁS!
se vc quer literalmente ficar a frente do seu curso, ent é só usar o ossu/computer-science.
- What is the best low level programming language to learn for someone who knows only python?
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I want to be a software engineer?
If someone's completed CS50X and W any recommendation where to carry on https://github.com/ossu/computer-science I'm thinking from core maths onwards seems reasonable.
What are some alternatives?
Grokking-the-Coding-Interview-Patterns - This course categorizes coding interview problems into a set of 16 patterns. Each pattern will be a complete tool - consisting of data structures, algorithms, and analysis techniques - to solve a specific category of problems. The goal is to develop an understanding of the underlying pattern, so that, we can apply that pattern to solve other problems. [UnavailableForLegalReasons - Repository access blocked]
developer-roadmap - Interactive roadmaps, guides and other educational content to help developers grow in their careers.
p1xt-guides - Programming curricula
machine-learning-interview - Machine Learning Interviews from FAANG, Snapchat, LinkedIn. I have offers from Snapchat, Coupang, Stitchfix etc. Blog: mlengineer.io.
coding-interview-university - A complete computer science study plan to become a software engineer.
interview - Everything you need to prepare for your technical interview
CS50x-2021 - 🎓 HarvardX: CS50 Introduction to Computer Science (CS50x)
awesome-interview-questions - :octocat: A curated awesome list of lists of interview questions. Feel free to contribute! :mortar_board:
open-source-cs - Video discussing this curriculum:
manim - Animation engine for explanatory math videos
missing-semester - The Missing Semester of Your CS Education 📚