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Do you know how learning programming at industrial sector?

Anyone knows about a "SoloLearn" or a source of information on industrial programming? It will be interesting also.

5th Oct 2017, 3:56 PM
Norberto GonzĂĄlez
Norberto GonzĂĄlez - avatar
1 Answer
+ 1
I suggest you take Computer Science academic courses found online to maximize your foundation. Study theories, basics and fundamentals (i.e. data structures, sample algorithms from FOSS, computing, compilers, computer organization and systems, architecture, Data Science, Databases, Machine Learning, Deep Learning, Web, Computation, Analysis, Parallel Comouting, Quantum Computing, Cloud Computing, Logic, Analytics, Architecture, Mobile Development, Wearables, Networking, System Design and Architecture, Paradigms, Optimization, Artificial Intelligence, Security,...) The industry uses a vast majority of practices, so there's no one stop solution; But you can hop onto something of these courses: — Programming Methodology (Stanford U.) — Programming Abstraction (Stanford U.) — Introduction to programming languages (Swathmore College) — Software Engineering (U. of Hawaii) — Introduction to Haskell (Penn Eng.) — Functional Systems in Haskell (Stanford U.) — Rust Programming (UPenn) — Programming Practice using Scala (KAIST) — Functional Programming with Clojure (Helsinki U.) — Functional Programming (Princeton U.) — Compiler Construction (Stanford U.) — Programming Languages (Brown U.) — Purely Functional Data Structures in Elm (U. of Chicago) — Hack your language (UC Berkeley) — Data Structures and Functional Programming (Cornell U.) — Network Programming Languages (Cornell U.) — Programming Languages (Northeastern U.) — Programming Languages and Compilers (U. of Virginia) — Scripting Languages (Cornell U.) — Types and Semantics (Cornell U.) ..... 🌠NOTE: THESE ARE JUST A FEW TO NAME...
18th Nov 2017, 5:02 PM
Navardium
Navardium - avatar