This is an opinonated guide for people who want to self-study the basics of Computer Science, in order to build solid foundations and avoid getting wiped by LLMs. I added some specializations path of my interest after you're done with the basics, in case you're interested too: Web Development, Databases and Machine Learning. There is a discord server here if you're looking for a community of self learning people. These being university courses, they won't stay online forever, make your own backup with yt-dlp for videos, and wget for websites. Now about the courses:
- CS 61A concentrates on the idea of abstraction, allowing the programmer to think in terms appropriate to the problem rather than in low-level operations dictated by the computer hardware.
- CS 61B deals with the more advanced engineering aspects of software, such as constructing and analyzing large programs.
- 15-213 provides a programmer's view of how computer systems execute programs, store information, and communicate. It enables students to become more effective programmers, especially in dealing with issues of performance, portability and robustness.
- CSCI 0220 gives you the tools to explore interesting questions and convince yourself and others of their answers. You'll be introduced to new worlds of ideas and ways of thinking. We'll learn about Set Theory, Logic, Number Theory, Combinatorics, Graph Theory, and Probability.
🥼 Labs | 📹 Videos | 📕 Books | 📝 Notes
- Fluency in english
- High school mathematics 📕
- Some discipline
- UCB - CS 61A - Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs
- UCB - CS 61B - Data Structures 🥼 📝
- CMU - 15-213 - Introduction to Computer Systems 📹
- Brown University - CSCI 0220 - Discrete Structures and Probability - Spring 2024 📹
- Use a GNU/Linux distro. I suggest Fedora, with Distrobox so that all your development environments are in separated containers. You will have to install lots of stuff, this will prevent conflicts and filling your computer with things you only need temporary.
- Use a simple text editor with syntax highlighting (like Helix) so that you type everything, without the help of autocomplete or LSPs. They are good for productivity, they suck for learning. Things will stick better if you type and force yourself to remember what to type.
- When stuck take a break. Only look at solution if it's taking days to solve. These courses are known to be hard and are supposed to be hard.
- Build stuff. It does not have to be a novel thing. Pick something that's already been done, identify the main functionality and start from there. You can iterate or jump to something else when done. Some recommendations: a text editor, a version control system, a database, and old school video game like Snake or Pacman.
Count 200 to 250h per course.
Yes, but make sure to build a portfolio and start networking along the way. Getting a job is matter of who you know, more than what you know, if you don't have a degree.