Hey Chris! Currently trying to prep for an extended Facebook interview process over the course of a few months as I am being considered for it! When you recommended the curriculums for those courses at the universities you listed, is it better to just watch/read their lecture material provided by the professors or just research the topics listed on the curriculums on our own on places like UA-cam?
I'm floored by the quality of this video. I have been studying cs for a year. In that year, of all the coding interview prep vids I have seen, this is by far the best. You were: organized, engaging, and thorough. I'd be a big silly goose to not subscribe after watching this.
Trust bro. You’ll grow exponentially fast once you get to about third year. Everything’s based on the same frame of thinking so if you have a solid foundation it’ll work out in the end bro.
If he spoke as efficiently in the interview as he did in this video, it's no wonder they hired him. It sounds like he has a multiprocessor in his brain., I can barely keep up!
Not for anything but don't stress out about it too much. Developers and engineers tend to make things harder than they need to be and in result it creates this psuedo level of "elite intelligence". Yes, these interviews at these big companies are incredibly tough but if you practice enough you'll eventually get it. In fact the level of difficulty of these interviews at these companies are actually unnecessarily difficult and often times pretentious because what they're actually doing on the job isn't anything like the interview, but thats another topic. If you want to be a better programmer, keep programming. I have no doubt in my mind that you'll be a great programmer the more you practice throughout your academic career.
Hands down, not only the best coding interview prep advice out there, but also best advice on how to get into becoming a person that can accomplish any goal they set their mind to! Thank you Chris for the great content.
You're one of the few people that touch upon both the technical components AS well as the human-ness component that requires just as much preparation. Thank you for sharing one thing I didn't think about for preparation -- creating rules and behaviors to fall back upon and using reinforcement to drill them in. I've made so many mistakes in relation to off-by-one errors and pointer mis-management that it felt like pretty much luck when I passed seemingly hard problems. I lacked consistency, but if I was more aware of devil in these details and ensuring that I had them covered, I'll find more success. Thanks, Chris!!! Hopefully my second go'round will be fruitful with these crucial bits!
I know I have roasted you in the past but honestly let me tell you this is the single most valuable piece of content regarding interview preparation and how to be better at CS jobs in general. This is an absolutely golden resource. Well done. It covers everything perfectly.
@@trustthe_process4371 Not everyone can come out of graduation and be a billionaire playboy philanthropist entrepreneur like you. Nothing wrong with getting experience and guidance at a good company.
If you found this helpful, make sure to smash that like button and drop a comment! Everyone loves timestamps, so here are the timestamps: Story of your life + Overview - 0:00 Data Structures / Algos Content - 0:38 Resources - 2:26 "Be experienced" - 4:42 "Know what you're doing" - 8:42 "Be smart." (Me training for my alternative career as a motivational speaker) - 13:15
@@irvinge4641 my username was cjereza - it doesn't have most of my problems though (I did a lot of them on paper/whiteboard and didn't actually submit the code, so it doesn't show up as completed)
I subscribed a few days ago to your channel and I am wondering why I didn't find it earlier :)) Thank you for the nice explained and detailed video ! :D I also would want to know, what's the song you use at the final of the this video ? It' s fantastic, man !
Life in general is like an interview process and vise-versa. You kind of need to know what you are dealing with. 1. Break Down Problems be it an interview or life 2. Understand Fundamental Blocks of each sub problem 3. Try to find easiest solution first and see if it solves your sub problem 4. Try and think of ways to do it better and keep improvise
no don't bruh... it's really not that hard. It just takes effort. Just like anything in life... Like the people who come up with these terms just make it sound hard but it's really not. Like recursion is just "looking inside, what you're looking inside, what you're looking inside etc. until you find what you are looking for". A stack is just a stack. Like a stack of papers. If you add a piece of paper to the stack, it goes to the top of the stack. If you want to remove a piece of paper from a stack, you remove it from the top of the stack. A queu is just a line. Like I'm not gonna go and explain everything but they are all so easy but just come with names that make it sound hard and as if theres a lot.
I think this is my first comment ever and I must say 🤯- this video totally deserved it. Videos usually beat around the bush but you got straight to the point and gave great info. Absolutely thankful!!
one of the best videos I've seen on the topic! I really like the part about trying to improve from problem to problem, I never thought about writing what I've learned down but you're right, totally should
You can sometimes write what you learnt in the comments itself. So when you revisit the code you remember where you made the mistake earlier and now see whether you have learnt it or not. Just a suggestion
This is best, most refreshing and amazing video I have seen in a while. Such depth in everything You said yet so much fun. Its incredible. Keep Inspiring!!
Wow. Great video. I love the use of what may seem like cliches but when you've explained and broken down the ideas in such an efficient, clear and concise manner I have to say this is absolute gold. Truly appreciate this video. Truly great work
You're such an inspiration man! I'm also pursuing Computer Science but I find it difficult. I really learn so much from your videos. Keep up the good work. Also, make more MEMES.
Bro , no one , i mean no one can beat the way you present your content and edit your videos ... no wonder you cracked those company interviews... You Earned a new sub today 🔥🔥🔥🔥
Bro, this is gold. I will say I have always recommended these types of tools coming from the top universities. glad to see that I was going in the right path.
By far, the best video on the subject matter I have come across. (Videos by Tech Lead and Clement included). Watching it so many times and it seems fresh (100% informative) each time.
Wow, what a seriously valuable video! Most of the videos like this are "practice your algorithms and data structures. Don't feel bad when you get to eat, go up there and get what you want. Thanks for watching." This had such a meaningful approach and I will be coming back from time to time when I need a pointer on what topic to hit next.
Hi Chris, I have never felt like replying after watching a youtube video. But, after watching this video, I can't help appreciating your content :). This is the most helpful information. Keep Rocking!!
I liked the way in which the video is structured, its really thought-provoking and answers the general queries to the point. Keep up the good work bro!!!
Been working from last 4 years as a Software Engineer doing mostly development around web but never had enough confidence in problem solving as in terms of DSA. I am gonna give it a thought now because this is the first time someone has explained these things with proper reasoning and i guess it makes more sense to "put yourself in the ring if you want to win the fight or just even fight". Thanks Chris!
I first watched this video as I was preparing for my technical interview to get into bootcamp and several months later I’m watching it as I am preparing for my Google technical interview. I’ve watched a lot of these sorts of videos on UA-cam and this is hands-down the most strategic, informative and motivating video of this kind. Thank you!
Man you are so so so amazing. Love you man. I have literally watched a hundreds and hundreds of videos on what to learn, what cs student should do, how to crack a coding interview bla..bla..bla.blaaaaaaa But this is the only video I truly appreciated. Not only you told the technical stuff but also the human things are so true and I have just saved this video and gonna watch every single time I just break or get too bored and would be seeing how much more I need to prepare. Once again you are awesome man!!!
It's 12 noon. I haven't slept yet. Been using Pomodoros and ADHD Focus Music (from UA-cam) to get homework done. Did alright these past few days. I really like how you break everything down in this video. Goodnight. See you at around 7pm.
This is the first video I have seen on this channel. I hit the sub button at 0:07 cuz I knew anyone with such a proper meme reference and honesty in the opening is gonna be legit. P.S - great content, appreciate it
When you are on point and dont waste viewers time like in this video you get not only likes but also subscribers easily. Great job on explaining the process!
I think one of the biggest secrets to getting unstuck is to not panic. Small amounts of stress can increase focus, but there's a tipping point where you start to get stuck in the details and lose that big-picture awareness which is absolutely essential for solving novel, difficult problems. For me, this is 100% where mindfulness shines.
Man the gold part on this video is when you said you finish a problem and then ask yourself: What could I improve on my solution? Since I heard that from yesterday I've been doing it. I mean, I was KIND OF doing it but if my solution was making me happy I was not trying to improve it too much (like for example improve memory from O(N) to O(1)). Now that I've been asking myself that question for every problem I've realized two or three cool things already... in basically two days :) . Keep doing these videos!
I've read through this comment several times and it's still extremely motivating for me. Glad you found this helpful! Happy to see you around the channel - keep up the good work and good luck on your interviews!
I wish this video existed a year ago when I interviewed for Google 😩. But I have another interview for the Google Software engineering internship in 2 weeks so this was extremely helpful. Thank you so much!!
Really good shit my dood. First time seeing your videos and though I’m not used to the memeyness, the content is very good. I like your video cause it’s less about the coding questions and more of learning how to prepare for the real whiteboard interview
I don't even want a job at big tech company. Im following this to get better at programming and interviewing in case in the future I lose my job. Better to be prepared than sorry.
Im pretty excited to go into a CS and economics major when I'm done with high school in a couple years, right now working to get myself into the top universities so I can pursue both. I'm not especially worried about what you said about interviews but instead working on experience (through learning about data types etc).
For practice with technical interviews, check out:
www.techseries.dev/a/17718/VzG4t5dH
www.algoexpert.io/chris
Hey Chris! Currently trying to prep for an extended Facebook interview process over the course of a few months as I am being considered for it!
When you recommended the curriculums for those courses at the universities you listed, is it better to just watch/read their lecture material provided by the professors or just research the topics listed on the curriculums on our own on places like UA-cam?
This guy is one of the few on UA-cam who actually know what he's talking about. In short, he made it into Google because he's smarter than most.
Feudalism sucks, honey
get off the D
I'm way too stupid to understand any of this.
@@reign80 Me too Bruh!
Nice to find yOu here rro
I'm floored by the quality of this video. I have been studying cs for a year. In that year, of all the coding interview prep vids I have seen, this is by far the best. You were: organized, engaging, and thorough. I'd be a big silly goose to not subscribe after watching this.
Thanks so much Tyler!! I really appreciate this - this is really motivational for me. Happy to have you here on the channel :D
Trust bro. You’ll grow exponentially fast once you get to about third year. Everything’s based on the same frame of thinking so if you have a solid foundation it’ll work out in the end bro.
1:36 @@hunggarchristian
After watching this video as a freshman I realize I'm still a smol brain
MFI you’re sadly right :-(
this is not freshman content, this is sophmore/junior CS content at minimum.
Gura chan
on god just finished first year
Brain will grow no worries just keep it up!
If he spoke as efficiently in the interview as he did in this video, it's no wonder they hired him. It sounds like he has a multiprocessor in his brain., I can barely keep up!
InvictuZ he is an indigo guy.
Also lots and lots of jump cuts 😉
InvictuZ
Editing bud
if I can keep up does that mean I too have a multiprocessor in my brain?
Lots of jump cuts and lots of yelling in the mirror between the cuts.
I’m a freshman and this made me cry tbh. Not that you’re bad or anything lol. It’s just me realizing how big programming really is.
Same.
Welcome to the club 😆
Other TechLead nah man, I have a passion for it. I just don’t like my professor lol.
Easiest way to grasp it is one language at a time. SQL -> Python -> Ruby -> Java -> C# -> etc You may only need like 3 languages tbh.
Not for anything but don't stress out about it too much. Developers and engineers tend to make things harder than they need to be and in result it creates this psuedo level of "elite intelligence". Yes, these interviews at these big companies are incredibly tough but if you practice enough you'll eventually get it. In fact the level of difficulty of these interviews at these companies are actually unnecessarily difficult and often times pretentious because what they're actually doing on the job isn't anything like the interview, but thats another topic.
If you want to be a better programmer, keep programming. I have no doubt in my mind that you'll be a great programmer the more you practice throughout your academic career.
Hands down, not only the best coding interview prep advice out there, but also best advice on how to get into becoming a person that can accomplish any goal they set their mind to! Thank you Chris for the great content.
You're one of the few people that touch upon both the technical components AS well as the human-ness component that requires just as much preparation. Thank you for sharing one thing I didn't think about for preparation -- creating rules and behaviors to fall back upon and using reinforcement to drill them in. I've made so many mistakes in relation to off-by-one errors and pointer mis-management that it felt like pretty much luck when I passed seemingly hard problems. I lacked consistency, but if I was more aware of devil in these details and ensuring that I had them covered, I'll find more success. Thanks, Chris!!! Hopefully my second go'round will be fruitful with these crucial bits!
I know I have roasted you in the past but honestly let me tell you this is the single most valuable piece of content regarding interview preparation and how to be better at CS jobs in general. This is an absolutely golden resource. Well done. It covers everything perfectly.
Thank you, this really means a lot to me 🙏
You’re an asshole
@@huey1153 i agree
@@huey1153 wait what did i do
Chris Jereza
not you, the op
Everyone: listen to this guy, he knows what he's talking about. You need at least 6 months of preparation with all that he has mentioned.
Trust the_process, 9-5 slave getting 150k a yr. I’m down
@Drone Dogs
That is the reason why I moved to Texas, SF is expensive
@@trustthe_process4371 Not everyone can come out of graduation and be a billionaire playboy philanthropist entrepreneur like you. Nothing wrong with getting experience and guidance at a good company.
@@SpitForge yurp lol
1 month if you cram
Wow! Absolutely transparent and systematically presented! Thank you :)))
This is not among the best, "The best" coding interview preparation video I have ever seen, you sound so REAL! You rock!
If you found this helpful, make sure to smash that like button and drop a comment! Everyone loves timestamps, so here are the timestamps:
Story of your life + Overview - 0:00
Data Structures / Algos Content - 0:38
Resources - 2:26
"Be experienced" - 4:42
"Know what you're doing" - 8:42
"Be smart." (Me training for my alternative career as a motivational speaker) - 13:15
can you share your leetcode account name? i want to see what problems you mastered before your interview
@@irvinge4641 my username was cjereza - it doesn't have most of my problems though (I did a lot of them on paper/whiteboard and didn't actually submit the code, so it doesn't show up as completed)
I subscribed a few days ago to your channel and I am wondering why I didn't find it earlier :))
Thank you for the nice explained and detailed video ! :D
I also would want to know, what's the song you use at the final of the this video ? It' s fantastic, man !
@@mihaimusat360 hi! The song doesn't have a name - my brother made it for me from scratch
@@mihaimusat360 and thank you so much for your support!
Having an algorithm for solving algorithm problems 😅That is gold and the best advice for interviews.
As someone whose had offers from Google, Facebook, Microsoft etc.. this is really true and informative.
Great video man!
Hey buzzy, were you from a reputed school??
I always put these interview tips videos in 1.25x speed, and this was the first one that I literally almost put
Life in general is like an interview process and vise-versa. You kind of need to know what you are dealing with.
1. Break Down Problems be it an interview or life
2. Understand Fundamental Blocks of each sub problem
3. Try to find easiest solution first and see if it solves your sub problem
4. Try and think of ways to do it better and keep improvise
Great video. I love how it's actual advice on how to approach problem-solving and how to approach the interview itself. Good shit Chris!
I was considering changing my major to cs and after watching this I think im just gonna drop out
no don't bruh... it's really not that hard. It just takes effort. Just like anything in life... Like the people who come up with these terms just make it sound hard but it's really not. Like recursion is just "looking inside, what you're looking inside, what you're looking inside etc. until you find what you are looking for". A stack is just a stack. Like a stack of papers. If you add a piece of paper to the stack, it goes to the top of the stack. If you want to remove a piece of paper from a stack, you remove it from the top of the stack. A queu is just a line. Like I'm not gonna go and explain everything but they are all so easy but just come with names that make it sound hard and as if theres a lot.
I think this is my first comment ever and I must say 🤯- this video totally deserved it. Videos usually beat around the bush but you got straight to the point and gave great info. Absolutely thankful!!
Thank you!
one of the best videos I've seen on the topic! I really like the part about trying to improve from problem to problem, I never thought about writing what I've learned down but you're right, totally should
You can sometimes write what you learnt in the comments itself. So when you revisit the code you remember where you made the mistake earlier and now see whether you have learnt it or not.
Just a suggestion
Can’t wait to get my offer and then steal everything you just said into my own video 🤗🤭
LMAO bet 😂😂😂
Congrats on getting the offer lol
Love how quickly and systematically you covered all the key topics. No time wasted.. GOLD
Thanks so much! I appreciate the support.
This is best, most refreshing and amazing video I have seen in a while. Such depth in everything You said yet so much fun. Its incredible. Keep Inspiring!!
Never seen this type of video in my entire interview preparation.This man nailed it.
This is the only UA-cam video that I have found to be truly useful for the coding interview. Thank you bud!
My pleasure! Glad it helped you out
What an amazing guy you are ?? Never stopped walking in your ideas ..you look like a smart guy👍👍👍 congrats
You give much better advice than a lot of other coding channels and you sound very organized. Awesome video.
By far the only video that didn't waste time speaking and giving redundant information
This info is so valuable, and yet underrated.
Wow. Great video. I love the use of what may seem like cliches but when you've explained and broken down the ideas in such an efficient, clear and concise manner I have to say this is absolute gold. Truly appreciate this video. Truly great work
Thank you so much! I really appreciate it
Your every single word makes sense. i'm wandering your commencement speech will go VIRAL.
thank you
Loved it! No BS, no fluff. Just 3 direct real answers as to not only nail a software interview but any interview in life! 👌🏾👨🏾💻
Damn, an interview video which actually has good content, videos like this are becoming increasingly rare!!
Great Video! One reason I enjoy your videos is your ability to articulate concepts! Amazing stuff!
Thank you so much! I appreciate it :D
You're such an inspiration man! I'm also pursuing Computer Science but I find it difficult. I really learn so much from your videos. Keep up the good work. Also, make more MEMES.
When he said he does meditation 14:16 I was like yep I can since that from the start. It really does improve your life in so many ways.
100% it's so important!
Bro , no one , i mean no one can beat the way you present your content and edit your videos ...
no wonder you cracked those company interviews...
You Earned a new sub today 🔥🔥🔥🔥
Bro, this is gold. I will say I have always recommended these types of tools coming from the top universities. glad to see that I was going in the right path.
By far, the best video on the subject matter I have come across. (Videos by Tech Lead and Clement included). Watching it so many times and it seems fresh (100% informative) each time.
Wow, what a seriously valuable video! Most of the videos like this are "practice your algorithms and data structures. Don't feel bad when you get to eat, go up there and get what you want. Thanks for watching." This had such a meaningful approach and I will be coming back from time to time when I need a pointer on what topic to hit next.
Hi Chris, I have never felt like replying after watching a youtube video. But, after watching this video, I can't help appreciating your content :). This is the most helpful information. Keep Rocking!!
Thank you so much!
I liked the way in which the video is structured, its really thought-provoking and answers the general queries to the point. Keep up the good work bro!!!
Been working from last 4 years as a Software Engineer doing mostly development around web but never had enough confidence in problem solving as in terms of DSA.
I am gonna give it a thought now because this is the first time someone has explained these things with proper reasoning and i guess it makes more sense to "put yourself in the ring if you want to win the fight or just even fight".
Thanks Chris!
You are simply amazing. I got facebook interview sql -very good. Ran away because of the coding interview. I am smashing it soon.
I first watched this video as I was preparing for my technical interview to get into bootcamp and several months later I’m watching it as I am preparing for my Google technical interview. I’ve watched a lot of these sorts of videos on UA-cam and this is hands-down the most strategic, informative and motivating video of this kind. Thank you!
this is by far the best interview help video I've seen
Man. This is the best video on this topic! Thank you so much Chris!
My pleasure! Glad it helped you out - happy to see you here on the channel
Man you are so so so amazing. Love you man. I have literally watched a hundreds and hundreds of videos on what to learn, what cs student should do, how to crack a coding interview bla..bla..bla.blaaaaaaa But this is the only video I truly appreciated. Not only you told the technical stuff but also the human things are so true and I have just saved this video and gonna watch every single time I just break or get too bored and would be seeing how much more I need to prepare. Once again you are awesome man!!!
Wow, this is the best video about tech interviews I've seen. Very well organized. 1 more subscriber. Thanks a lot, Chris!
It's 12 noon. I haven't slept yet. Been using Pomodoros and ADHD Focus Music (from UA-cam) to get homework done. Did alright these past few days. I really like how you break everything down in this video. Goodnight. See you at around 7pm.
Finally a clear and precise video. Right to the point
That was a REALLY well thought out and detailed video. Thanks for working hard at it! It is packed with useful ideas and strategies! You rock!
Thanks so much! I appreciate the support, stay tuned for more 💯
Way more informative than I was expecting it to be. Thanks, dude
now STOP wandering .
THIS ALL I NEED TO KNOW !
THANKS MATE
Still an absolute blast after three years🔥
This is like the only video giving true suggestion and path to head with on the internet. Working day by day to come more closer to FB/Google
where are you now?
You are doing a great job and helping out a lot of people out here. Thanks so much!!
My pleasure! Thanks so much for the support - feel free to share this anywhere people might find it helpful as well 👌
Probably the best and most helpful tech video on youtube
This is the first video I have seen on this channel. I hit the sub button at 0:07 cuz I knew anyone with such a proper meme reference and honesty in the opening is gonna be legit.
P.S - great content, appreciate it
Thanks so much Albus, I really appreciate it!
When you are on point and dont waste viewers time like in this video you get not only likes but also subscribers easily. Great job on explaining the process!
thanks so much! I really appreciate this
Don't usually comment, but good shit dude. Most correct advice I have seen out there
Thank you Jack! I really appreciate it
Saying that this was a great video is an understatement!!
Top notch quality; you're one smart cookie.
Thanks so much!
This is easily the best video that exists on UA-cam.......THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!
Thank you for your help. I think this video scared me in a good way. I thought I had most of this figured out. This is a big help.
Best content on interviews, fast, to the point. Keep it up :)
Thanks so much! Glad you found it helpful
This is really good advice for any technical kind of interview. Thanks.
Sophomore at the University of Texas at El Paso 🤙 This guy definitely knows what's good. Subscribed!
THANKS Chris!!! You’re the man! So much value.
"Writing code before you know how to solve the problem" You caught me. Funnier than funny things to do... :)
i never hit the subscribe button so fast when someone asked me to
I think one of the biggest secrets to getting unstuck is to not panic. Small amounts of stress can increase focus, but there's a tipping point where you start to get stuck in the details and lose that big-picture awareness which is absolutely essential for solving novel, difficult problems. For me, this is 100% where mindfulness shines.
You are a genius. Such practical tips. Never seen before.
Had to sub to your channel. Love the energy and positivity!
WOOOO welcome to the channel! Happy to see you here michael
Holyshit this sounds legit af. Never heard advise this clear and this concentrated. Thanks a bunch for this
my pleasure! Feel free to share it with anyone that might find it helpful
Me: not in computer science
Also me: *LMAOOOOOOO REVERSE A LINKED LIST AND SMOKE PURP HAHAHA WHAT A GOOD VIDEO*
Yo your comments give me life 😂
Try doubly linked
Man the gold part on this video is when you said you finish a problem and then ask yourself: What could I improve on my solution?
Since I heard that from yesterday I've been doing it. I mean, I was KIND OF doing it but if my solution was making me happy I was not trying to improve it too much (like for example improve memory from O(N) to O(1)). Now that I've been asking myself that question for every problem I've realized two or three cool things already... in basically two days :) . Keep doing these videos!
I've read through this comment several times and it's still extremely motivating for me. Glad you found this helpful! Happy to see you around the channel - keep up the good work and good luck on your interviews!
The only youtube video that is actually helpful. Thanks
phenomenal video man, keep up the good work! This was really informative, and i subscribed 6 minutes in
I appreciate it! Happy to have you here on the channel 😁
This is amazing! Thanks so much. Helped me so much to get started preparing for interviews, :)
Glad it helped you out! Thanks
great vid man. Im just starting the road and it made me pump. I hope ill be there too
mock interviews alone, that's the best idea you gave me
Loved the content! I bet Joma's ego felt good when you mentioned Waterloo in your vid
I wish this video existed a year ago when I interviewed for Google 😩. But I have another interview for the Google Software engineering internship in 2 weeks so this was extremely helpful. Thank you so much!!
I'm still a Sophomore in Diploma CS and I'm learning these stuffs now its really fun .Looking forward to work with big companies :D
Really good shit my dood. First time seeing your videos and though I’m not used to the memeyness, the content is very good. I like your video cause it’s less about the coding questions and more of learning how to prepare for the real whiteboard interview
"We're gonna go kinda fast"
*Looks at the video time and sees it's 15 minutes* YOU A DAMN LIYUH, But I'm still staying
This video couldn't be any better. Thank you so much :)
Thanks for making this video and putting it out for the world. I've learned a lot from you.
my pleasure!
Chris: Interviews, YOU SUCK AT THEM!!!!!!
Me: Bro Tell me Something I don't know!!!!
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.
.
.
.
This Vid was much needed! Thanks!!
amazing content your channel is due to blow !
You are the man! Dude. Tons of thanks for making this video
We need more video with prep tutorials for FAANG interviews
Hey man, here’s an extra like for you.
I don't even want a job at big tech company. Im following this to get better at programming and interviewing in case in the future I lose my job. Better to be prepared than sorry.
Thank you so much. The content was comprehensive, to the point, and extremely helpful.
Im pretty excited to go into a CS and economics major when I'm done with high school in a couple years, right now working to get myself into the top universities so I can pursue both. I'm not especially worried about what you said about interviews but instead working on experience (through learning about data types etc).
You would just speak and I would hire you! Nicely said.
Thank you!
Hashmaps are overpowered 😂 TRUUU THANK U YUNG GOD