hopping my linux distro and doing a minimal setup works for me to start a new journey(aka motivation) and make up my mind for it.
idk about the others.
void to arch rn.
@Itsfoss I like arch but I would go with void linux.
- it is stable.
- rolling release.
- and has a good amount of packages comparable to arch.
- has musl lib c variant for tweakers.
- gret package manager that follows the Unix philosophy.
hopping my linux distro and doing a minimal setup works for me to start a new journey(aka motivation) and make up my mind for it.
idk about the others.
void to arch rn.
done for today
- linear weighted regression, logistic regression and MLE theory.
- some prob and stats related to likelihood estimation.
it was not a productive day. but gonna fix it tmrw.
@ThePrimeagen best of 5 attempts with best at 84 and worst at 63.
but *real* typing speed is thinking and programming at the same time, and I am a few years behind it definitely.
and i think i do 20 to 40 wpm in it.
@CWood_sdf but we should also ask where we can gain this discipline and experience in any language of choice.
are *real programmers willing to pass down the knowledge
if so how could I learn them?
(I am a student btw.) What do you think.
@CWood_sdf So uni's and online courses don't teach you that and only experience can
But I see stud prgrmrs opt rust(even though they don't fully understand it) as a way to write bug free code to land in a company or work in them
The problem isn't opting to use rust but lack of experience
done for today:
- revised cs229 chapter 1 on supervised learning.
- programmed different types of gradient descent and linear regression on python.
- switched back to vim from emacs(had to go through vimtutor) and need to config on the go in the upcoming week or so.