Hello /g/, I am going to start learning programming from scratch again; the thing is after two years in uni and countless youtube videos at random my knowledge and understanding of programming is all sort of mess with no solid base.
So I am going to get to very basics and start from there, and establish a base then build out from there.
I am modestly speaking pretty intelligent so understanding deep concepts and picking them up isn't a problem, so I'd like a medium that acknowledges me as that, codecadamy an other meme- that try t put fun where it doesn't need any more doesn't satisfy me, can you recommend me some books or a singular starting point that i can dedicate myself to?
effort isn't a problem, 12 hours a day is fine by me, this is the only thing I intend to do until I am satisfied with my knowledge and programming ability.
I know The Tao of programming is /g/ core book, I actually saved all the infographs but lost it in my autism wipe everything kill-yourself rage. So yeah hopefully someone have similar experience and can share some insight or give guidance.
forgot to add,
pls respond
No trolling but start with a language and give it time.
>>57186297
Is C a good language to start?
I don't wanna just know the syntax but understand programming itself,that I should be able to come up with solutions etc,
are there any good C books?
The C Programming Language (K&R)
>>57186328
C is still used in nearly everything.And for the basics i would say every book about c is your friend
>>57186342
Thanks, downloading it now, that's a starting point.
>>57186328
Someone posted this in another thread and said it's a good list.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/562303/the-definitive-c-book-guide-and-list
I don't know anything about C though, so I can't vouch for their usefulness.
Search.
open source university.
I started when they had python as their first course. Now it is c
Also when you fail to study 12h a day don't stop learning