Learn Code The Hard Way -- Books And Courses To Learn To Code Code & Conquer Most Important: Have Fun. And earn some badges. See how your strategy works out in different scenarios, challenge other players, receive points, earn badges and climb your way to the top of the leaderboard. Boost your coding skills. Do it playing. This game provides the perfect setting to introduce the key concepts employers ask you to know. The Nature of Code Hello! By browsing the table of contents on your left, you can read the entire text of this book online for free, licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. Start reading the introduction now! If you like this book, please consider supporting it via the links below: Please submit corrections to the book on my Nature of Code GitHub repo. Thanks everyone! Copyright © 2012 by Daniel Shiffman This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. All of the book’s source code is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This book was generated by the Magic Book Project. Editor Shannon Fry Illustrations Zannah Marsh Cover Design David Wilson Interior Design Web Site Design Steve Klise Editorial and Design Assistant Evan Emolo Magic Book Lead Developers Rune Madsen, Steve Klise Magic Book Researchers
The 100 Greatest Free Fonts for 2014 Here we are, once again, with our now-famous selection of the top 100 free fonts for 2014. This year we have only selected fonts published or updated in late 2013 and 2014, giving you one of the most up-to-date lists around. The majority are completely free with licenses for commercial use; the odd few available for personal use only have extended license options at a very reasonable price. The free font list comprises both entire font families and single weight downloads; either way, there is something for everyone and we think you'll love the ones we have picked out for you. Font Selection We have selected all kinds of typefaces which can be seamlessly integrated into any design: Sans Serif, Slab Serif, Rounded, Decorative, Display, Art Deco, Geometric, Futuristic, and many more besides. We have categorized the typefaces to help you browse more efficiently. Sans-Serif Typefaces Display and Decorative typefaces Serif Typefaces Script, Calligraphic and Hand-drawn
Welcome to RoboMind.net, the new way to learn programming Introduction to Algorithms - Download free content from MIT The Nature of Code 50 Fascinating Things I've Read Lately Pretty simple. When I read something I like, I try to write it down. In no particular order, here are 50 things I've read lately that, for one reason or another, caught my attention. "Today, of Americans officially designated as 'poor,' 99 percent have electricity, running water, flush toilets, and a refrigerator; 95 percent have a television, 88 percent a telephone, 71 percent a car and 70 percent air conditioning. Cornelius Vanderbilt had none of these." "As late as the 1950s, New York's garment industry was the nation's largest manufacturing cluster. "If everyone worldwide had the same chance of becoming a billionaire, you'd expect the chance of a billionaire child having a billionaire parent to be one out of 9.3 million. "Two married 66-year-olds with roughly average earnings over their lives will end up paying about $110,000 in dedicated Medicare taxes through the payroll tax, including the portion their employers pay. "Don't have $7.5 million?
PythonBooks - Learn Python the easy way ! AK's Guide to Suits st - A place for geeks to share what they've done, who they did it with and connect with great companies What Type of Shoe is That? | SOLETOPIA We decided it was time to update Soletopia’s Guide to Shoe Terminology with a Dappered-inspired infographic. This was made as a rough guide to help people understand the shoe terms that get thrown around. We’ve covered the Oxford, Blucher, Derby, Balmoral, Saddle, Austerity, Brogue (half, full and quarter), Monk, Spectator & more. We also look at the different toe cap terms such as, the Cap Toe, Medallion & Perforated. More after the break:
How to Pick the Right Programming Language Adron Hall is the lead developer of cloud solutions at New Relic. During the course of every coding project, a software developer must make dozens of decisions. Sometimes this involves solving a problem unique to a particular domain space or a particular architectural issue. Too often, languages are applied to a problem space where another language would be better. Financial Sector The financial sector benefits from a number of languages. Another key need in the financial sector is languages that benefit from object-oriented paradigms with strong architectural patterns backed by a lot of guidance from the organizations around the languages. Top Languages: Scala, Java, and C# Agency, Media, Advertising, and Design With the overall design processes needed in creative work, languages that can prototype fast are in high demand. In recent years, with mobile technology becoming the prominent computing medium, a larger focus has been put on developing for these platforms.
Style it your way | Mavericks Laces Start Start by lacing into 5th eyelets from above Jump up Jump the shoe and lace into 4th eyelets from underneath Cross Under Make your first cross lacing into the 3rd eyelet from underneath Repeat Same again - make sure you go in from underneath Cross Over Repeat the cross, this time lace in from above Cross, again lacing through from the top Jump up the shoe and loop into 1st eyelets End Tie off and go enjoy being a Maverick. Start by lacing into fourth eyelets from the top in a straight line across Cross down two eyelets and lace trhough from the top Head down one eyelet and feed back up from beneath Jump up again Croos up the shoe to the eyelets directly beneath the straight and feed through from the top Cross again Cross the laces to the second top eyelets - be sure to feed them underneath all other laces Head straight down the shoe the the eyelets below Final Cross Cross upward to top eyelets Tie off. after adjusting laces from bottom of shoe to tighten Start by lacing into bottom eyelets from beneath