
No title available
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
YOU ARE THE REASON
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Product Placement

No title available
Show & Tell
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
tumblr dot com

Discoholic šŖ©
AnasAbdin

Kiana Khansmith
$LAYYYTER

ē„ę„ / Permanent Vacation
occasionally subtle
šŖ¼

romaā

Janaina Medeiros
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Denmark

seen from Senegal

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Peru
seen from Malaysia
@computersciencememes
early 2000ā²s self-care
Spiders are the only web developers that enjoy finding bugs.
XP/98 remix
ok what the fuck
It sounds like some digital boss theme
I had to draw this.
holy shit SLAIN
@doomybot can you past the Turing test?
cuck
Java sucks like a coffee vacuum! Mnyurrrrr!!
(-vacuum noises-)
Grapes
5/2/2017 Doing some basic HTML today, computer background that I really adore by eintsein, and a study playlist on Spotify that is so lovely š
Things Programmers Shout #674
*three hours later* āā¦.ONE FUCKING SEMICOLON.ā // submitted by @proarie
Hi, do you know any resources to start learning coding, preferably for free? Ty!!
Hiya! ⨠Yeah, Iāll see what I can find! However! Online courses often have a build in a code editor. Donāt. Honestly, do not. Get a full software and install it, donāt be restricted to just an online code editor, even on a basic level.Ā First of all decide what language you want to start learning. For complete beginners, Iād recommend Python or C.Ā
š” Ā codeacademyĀ (this Iāve tried myself and yep, itās really well written and good for beginners; it doesnāt have many courses tho)Ā š” programmr.comĀ š” codeavengersš” code.orgš” Buckyās wonderful tutorials (these are amazing! Iāve only done the c++ ones, but they were really well explained and included stuff like installing a software as well!)
And now here are someĀ ātoolsā to use while programming:Ā
šĀ stackoverflowĀ - biggest platform there is; you can ask them anything, but itās probably been asked before so try looking on it at firstšĀ cppreference.com - has all the information about c++ built in libraries, functions, variables and anything youāll possibly needĀ šĀ python visualizer - helps you visualize code if you donāt have a compiler on your laptop - they also have other languagesšĀ learnpythonĀ šĀ python tutorialšĀ game development with pygame - do something FUN! Itās not that hard, just try itĀ Thatās about it! Hope this helps! xĀ
One of the most important things I have learned since I started working is that itās okay to not know things. This was really surprising for me because in uni I always felt like I should already know everything - if a professor mentioned something they were not teaching in that course I mostly didnāt ask since I thought it was a prerequisite.
At work, no one cares. Or rather, everyone knows that you canāt know everything because there are SO MANY tools and frameworks and methods of doing stuff that you canāt possibly know them all. Especially if youāre fresh out of uni/college! Man, programming at uni and actually building software in the industry are so vastly different, itās like learning to program all over again. And your colleagues know that you didnāt use Tomcat or Docker or Hibernate or Java EE because why would you? Itās okay!
This is why I donāt hesitate to ask anything, even things that seem to be self-evident to everyone else. Because Iāve never gotten a bad reaction from anyone finding out I didnāt know something. No condescension, no irritation, no confusion. Just explanations in a reasonable tone of voice in a way I could understand. So donāt be afraid, it might take some getting used to but this way youāll learn so much and will be a lot more relaxed. (Thatās not to say I donāt have any problems at work or that there is no awkwardness. The social and organisational stuff is not as easy, but I never feel bad asking about technical stuff.)
binary is as simple as 1, 10, 11
Things Programmers Shout #640
āThis shouldnāt work but it does. Nobody touch it.ā // submitted by @satanicpisshead
Me after a successful day of coding: Wow. I love coding. Iām so glad I chose this career path. I feel so smart and fulfilled.
Me after an unsuccessful day of coding: *watching computer burn in a fire* Is it too late to change my major?
List of things Iāve learnt studying computer science and programming.
1. Computers are shit.
2. If you ever think you are dumb, why? Computers are literally just bits of fucking sand and people still love them.
3. You canāt trust humans.
4. You canāt trust yourself.
5. you canāt trust data.
6. forget about trust.
7. words donāt look right after you read them a million times over
8. programmers are gods
9. programmers are fucking stupid
10. hate
11. Iāve wasted my life
Things Programmers Shout #745
āThis doesnāt make any sen⦠oh. because Iām an idiot.ā
Me: *over-confidently writes whole program at once* Program: Program: Program: e r r o r