Help friends

whats up Sup Forums
recently got into coding, always been into helping friends build rigs and whatever and ive decided my next rig is going to run linux, so i learned (what i think) about a intermediate level of python
is there any place i can like test my knowledge?
ive already gone through all the basic projects, like dice rolls and that shit, i was thinking maybe use scikit to see if i can figure out machine learning? maybe follow along that google developer course that goes in on machine learning?
not sure where to go from the position im at, as i feel like those mini projects are way too easy/tedious

Other urls found in this thread:

scientificamerican.com/article/a-learning-secret-don-t-take-notes-with-a-laptop/
twitter.com/NSFWRedditGif

friends youre not being friendly

give me a fuck off jamal atleast for fucks sake, i feel like im shadow banned

Sup Forums i am very hurt desu

You do not need to know python to run linux

yea im aware of that, i wanted to learn code to like customize my linux rig is that makes sense
i want to be able to make it my own i think is the best way of putting it
its also been a long term goal of mine to learn coding because ive been into computers/electronics since forever from my dad

What exactly do you want to do on linux with python?

One thing I did was to look at resume threads on reddit cscareerquestions, see what projects others came up with and see if I can re-engineer them.

Pic related

>machine learning
Id love to be able to learn that but unfortunately it just looks like moon runes to me, it looks to me like this is what they found in the Roswell crash.

heres some more Moon Runes

>basics

...

not specifically python, but i want to be able to make some UI shit, like convenience it so to do a majority of things i dont ever have to look at a bash/terminal
will take advice
its definitely not the easiest math, but scikit and tensorflow have a lot of functions that do it for you
im also pretty thankful to be a "math-minded" human, so im sure with like 30 minutes and google i might be able to decipher the moon runes

a better way of putting it is that i essentially want to make my own rainmeter for linux, i am sure im sounding very ignorant and im sure theres a rainmeter equivalent for linux but i still would like the ability to do it on my own/modify what i download

>im also pretty thankful to be a "math-minded" human, so im sure with like 30 minutes and google i might be able to decode the moon runes
Thats great for you. I wish I could understand this because to me it really looks like the stuff they recovered from Roswell. What do I need to be able to understand this alien technology?

when i try to explain lets say some stats homework out to my roommates i typically just take my time and check knowledge of whats going on extremely often
so for example if they need help with
'''
g(x) = -4log(subscript)3(x)
find g prime x
'''
i make sure they know functions first, then make sure they know logs, then as im going through the steps i stop at almost every step, making sure that they can essentially do it on their own, because everything in those kind of questions are really algebra related and i know the guys im with know algebra
essentially what im trying to say is, atleast in my opinion, repetition in math can help even idiots through it, if youre doing the same type of equation fuck tons of times then itll be easier for your brain to recall it
you also have to make sure you have basic math concepts down though
a tool one of my friends uses is 'KhanAcademy'
he wasnt the best at math but his major required a couple calc levels so he went through all of Khan Academy, literally from 1st grade level to the very end, and he said that it really helped him, it might work for you too

You fuckers really don't know Baye's Rule? That's simple statistics. Why don't you start with a statistics book instead of jumping into shit you don't have a clue about? Fucking retards.

Thanks that seems like good advice and it could work I already was planning to keep doing as many algebra problems sets as I can find to build a solid foundation on.

I'm the only mathlet, the other user seems to already have this handled.

(checked)
dont rush going through shit you dont know is essentially the advice i was trying to give
whenever you study just write the steps out, reason it in your head (im doing this because i want this to happen) and just in general take your time
something a lot of people i know make the mistake (again, in my opinion) of rushing what their studying
the whole idea of studying is that youre trying to get knowledge of a topic/whatever
so yea even if you did 10 equations and got the right answers do you really understand how you did it?
that ends up leading to problems in the future because id say almost all of math is simple topic just building on top of eachother over and over and over, so if you dont understand a base level concept, or even a mid tier concept, youre not going to get something 'difficult'

i dont know how true this is, but again if youre trying new shit might as well try this along with what youre doing
scientificamerican.com/article/a-learning-secret-don-t-take-notes-with-a-laptop/

It is clear to me you have absolutely no clue what you are doing

I suggest that you go ahead and do that. At this point anything you try will fail.

sounds good man, thanks for the advice!