Quality graphical representation man. I don't know the general population but I find it extremely useful and enjoyable when things are explained with visual examples and graphs etc.
I think i hit gold finding your channel, very well done in such a simple short concice explanation. Something I'm looking forward trying to do as well to help myself learn different concepts = )
Nice explanation. Have not taken a Computer Science class in over 40 plus years, but that symbiotic relationship between software (the logical) and hardware (the physical) seems to be the same (the complier needing to change the input computer language to a "machine language" for the computer and it's physical components (using the analogy of the transistor as a "switch" with an on "1" or off "0"state). I'm sure a lot has changed in "solid state" electronics and software coding in those 40 plus years, feel free to correct my comments.
Quality graphical representation man. I don't know the general population but I find it extremely useful and enjoyable when things are explained with visual examples and graphs etc.
I find that relevant visuals can make information a lot more digestible and easy to remember so you're definitely not alone!
I have been so long trying to understand how the runtime works. By your simplicity and, well-explaining. I got everything.
Thanks ❤
Glad it helped!
I think i hit gold finding your channel, very well done in such a simple short concice explanation. Something I'm looking forward trying to do as well to help myself learn different concepts = )
Glad you enjoyed the video, thank you!!
awesome man!!!
Appreciate the kind words!
Thank you ❤
You're welcome :)
Big thanks
You're welcome!
very neatly explained👍
Appreciate the kind words!
Nice explanation. Have not taken a Computer Science class in over 40 plus years, but that symbiotic relationship between software (the logical) and hardware (the physical) seems to be the same (the complier needing to change the input computer language to a "machine language" for the computer and it's physical components (using the analogy of the transistor as a "switch" with an on "1" or off "0"state). I'm sure a lot has changed in "solid state" electronics and software coding in those 40 plus years, feel free to correct my comments.
Thanks Bro!
You're very welcome!
clear explenation
Thank you!!