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    CompSci Weekend SuperThread (August 16, 2019) Computer Science

    CompSci Weekend SuperThread (August 16, 2019) Computer Science


    CompSci Weekend SuperThread (August 16, 2019)

    Posted: 15 Aug 2019 06:05 PM PDT

    /r/compsci strives to be the best online community for computer scientists. We moderate posts to keep things on topic.

    This Weekend SuperThread provides a discussion area for posts that might be off-topic normally. Anything Goes: post your questions, ideas, requests for help, musings, or whatever comes to mind as comments in this thread.

    Pointers

    • If you're looking to answer questions, sort by new comments.
    • If you're looking for answers, sort by top comment.
    • Upvote a question you've answered for visibility.
    • Downvoting is discouraged. Save it for discourteous content only.

    Caveats

    • It's not truly "Anything Goes". Please follow Reddiquette and use common sense.
    • Homework help questions are discouraged.
    submitted by /u/AutoModerator
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    Ultimate Go study guides, with heavily documented code and programs analysis all in 1 place

    Posted: 16 Aug 2019 01:36 AM PDT

    Jonas Schmedtmann's JavaScript course is amazing

    Posted: 16 Aug 2019 04:29 AM PDT

    Facebook, Georgia Tech & OSU ‘ViLBERT’ Achieves SOTA on Vision-and-Language Tasks

    Posted: 15 Aug 2019 09:08 AM PDT

    Book/resources for applications of maths in computer science

    Posted: 15 Aug 2019 06:51 PM PDT

    I know that many areas of maths like stats and probabilty, linear algebra and calculus etc are used all around computer science, and I want to learn more.

    Does anyone have any good books to read or other resources about how maths is used practically in computer science and programming?

    Its best if any resources are fairly accessible, as I have a relatively low-level understanding of maths right now (I'm 17, doing maths and further maths A Level), but I do like to read around the subject a lot.

    Thank you :)

    submitted by /u/pineapplefucker420
    [link] [comments]

    The meme that was technically too true to be a joke...

    Posted: 15 Aug 2019 04:33 PM PDT

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