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asgs112755y@soapmactervish trying to learn Rust. The main website has a good book, but reading through all of that sounds cumbersome. So, best bet is to pick up something like building a small tool like Network Monitor or Device Info enumerator
I wanted to write a torrent client, but it was too uphill a task at that time -
kodaman295y@soapmactervish here's 100 https://dev.to/mibzman/... preferably your first projects should be something you are passionate about and you will use in your daily life, otherwise interest goes down the drain quick.
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rickh2765yConcur that building with code, and also reading others code (either in books or high quality source code) is the best way to learn.
Building is so key to cognitive engagement and incremental learning that I think reading code is so often overlooked. It is through studying prior art that we learn higher art, and ways of thinking we wouldn’t come up with naturally. If I had never read prior art, sure I would build things, but I would build things in the same shitty patterns over and over again, falsely encouraged in my practice by my ability to ‘make things work’.
No good novelist only writes; they read, voraciously. Their increasing ability to handle complexity comes from stretching their minds through the minds of others, and then doing the same with their own work. The same goes for all good mathematicians, scientists and philosophers. I don’t think our craft is so different.
Stuck in between learning java EE(already read a book but not written so much code) and learning to use Python for ML what should I do?
joke/meme