Have you tried OpenAI Codex and felt disappointed with the results?
The problem usually isn't Codex, it's the prompting.
Codex can work like your own AI development team, making changes and building features for you. But many beginners stop after the first draft because they don't know how to guide it effectively.
In our latest video, you'll learn how to:
> Create a clear project structure
> Use side-chat prompts effectively
> Improve and refine AI-generated code
> Build a complete website with AI
The better your instructions, the better your results.
Watch the new video and learn how to get the most out of Codex.
youtu.be/rMh_dt41Cbw?si…
If you are given a 2D matrix of sorted 0s and 1s, how do you find the row with the most 1s?
Brute-forcing takes O(N x M) time. But because the rows are sorted, there's a genius O(N log M) trick: Don't count the 1s. Just find the first 1 using Binary Search!
This tutorial breaks down the exact logic, the mathematical formula to get the count, and the edge cases that crash most solutions.
Link below:
youtu.be/hwWZkhuCCl4?si…
Students reach out to YouTube educators only when they don't understand what is being taught in their regular classrooms.
Dismissing them ignores the reality that these digital mentors are stepping up to bridge massive gaps in our education system and making quality learning accessible to millions.
True impact is measured by the students you help. Others' opinions don't even matter.
DAY 9 ✅
Today I started learning about Arrays in Java with @lovebabbar3 sir🙇.
Covered:
✅ What is an Array?
✅ 1D Arrays
✅ 2D Arrays
One thing that stood out to me is how arrays solve a problem I didn't even think about before.
Instead of creating separate variables for every value, we can store and manage a collection of data in a structured way.
It feels like I've crossed from learning Java syntax into learning the foundations of Data Structures.
2D arrays were especially interesting because they made me think about data in rows and columns rather than just a single list.
There's still a lot to learn, but I'm starting to see why arrays are one of the most important concepts in programming.
Day by day, the pieces are coming together. 🚀
Follow to See my journey and became a part of it.
Standard Binary Search is easy. But how do you search an array when the elements have been randomly swapped with their neighbors?
If you try the normal approach, it fails. To keep that O(log N) complexity, you have to completely change how you view your search space.
This is the perfect puzzle for our one-question-a-day grind. Watch this video and tell me you liked it or not.
Link :
youtu.be/VvQ6l6-ZYPY?si…
Stop waiting for that graduation degree to finally secure your financial independence.💵
I see so many students burning out—juggling heavy coursework, long daily commutes, and still stressing about the future. But what if you could double your income right now without sacrificing your grades or your peace of mind?
The secret is tech freelancing in the AI era. It’s not about working harder; it’s about learning the exact high-income skills that AI can’t do alone.
Here is your complete, step-by-step, zero-to-income guide to take control of your career today. Let's dive in and build.
Link below: 👇
youtu.be/wezlUn8kVd4?si…
🚨🚨 HIRING HIRING HIRING 🚨🚨
Getting a green "Accepted" is a rush. But watching the world's best coders hit "Wrong Answer on Test 4" because of a sneaky edge case you designed? That is legendary.
We are looking for Problem Setters to architect the elite competitive programming contests of 2026. If you value deep algorithmic logic over "vibe coding" shortcuts, we want your brain.
THE REQUIREMENTS
High Rating: Candidate Master (Codeforces) or equivalent expertise. Implementation Mastery: Code strict validators and optimal reference solutions smoothly.
Edge Case Obsession.
Polygon Savvy: Experience with Codeforces Polygon is a major plus.
THE PERKS:
Total Freedom: 100% remote. Work from your favorite coffee shop or your desk. Global Impact: Your puzzles will be solved and debated by thousands of top-tier developers. Competitive Pay: Earn based on the complexity and quality of your accepted problems.
HOW TO APPLY 📩
Skip the boring resume. Send your CP profile link and one original, beautiful problem idea to Comments! Let us see if you can outsmart the best.
Today i tried @CodeHelp4U Code Editor for run my code during question practice it's really cool🧑💻🫡
-Today's all Homework done ✅
-Practice some Questions ✅
@lovebabbar3 Gurudev🙏
#100DaysofCode#cpp#cjp2029
AI-generated projects might look great on the surface, but under the hood, they are often a mess. Common issues include:
• Horrible performance
• Broken authentication
• Terrible scalability
The worst part? When the system inevitably crashes, a "vibe coder" won't know how to debug or fix it.
Check out our video for detailed information👇:
youtu.be/MQHnJUCDnVA?si…
99% of students learn coding the exact wrong way. I know because I did it too.
I used to lie in bed, watching 50 Java tutorial videos back-to-back, feeling incredibly "productive." But the moment I sat down for my first online coding test, my mind went completely blank. I couldn't even write a basic Linked List.
I wasn't learning to code. I was just pretending to code. If you want to actually crack companies like Amazon or Microsoft, you have to stop watching and start building. Here are the 3 biggest traps to avoid:
1. The Passive Learning Trap Coding is like swimming. You cannot learn it by watching YouTube videos of other people swimming. You have to get in the water. Put the pen to paper, dry-run the logic, draw the flowchart, and actually type the code yourself.
2. The Random Order Trap Jumping from Arrays to DP, failing, and then jumping back to Trees is a recipe for disaster. You need structure. Master the language first-> Arrays/Strings-> Recursion (the most critical step!)-> O0Ps-> Linked Lists-> Trees -> DP/Graphs. Do not skip steps.
3. The 10-Minute Give-Up Trap If you look at the editorial or solution after only 15 minutes of trying, you are cheating yourself out of the real learning. Give a problem at least 45 minutes of deep focus. Interviewers don't want to see if you memorized the answer; they want to see how you think when you are stuck.
Stop comparing yourself to the person in your class who has a better resume. Your first or second year might have been wasted, but it's better late than never.
Sit down, close the tutorials, and start typing. (Insights from journey: youtu.be/wHBQdFcavqM?si…)
A golden opportunity just opened up! You can now intern with a Shark Tank India judge.
The steps:
> Pick your favorite brand/Shark
> Pitch your idea in a 2-min video
> Clear a quick AI interview
> Grab that ₹50k stipend!
Watch the video for the full details.
If you're worrying about your degree holding you back, just DON'T.
The biggest companies are hiring for skills and real development work right now. Watch till the end for the list of companies you should be targeting.
0 Followers 23 FollowingBackend Developer who loves optimizing DB queries and building scalable systems. Node.js | AWS | Docker. When I'm not coding APIs, I'm exploring Cloud architech
114 Followers 95 Following🧩 Cracking DSA daily | 💻 Full-Stack Dev (React + Node)
Documenting my raw coding journey from 0 → SWE 🚀
Follow for daily solutions + Real progress
0 Followers 18 Following👨💻 https://t.co/fbH5Eknha3 CSE student | Jaipur 💻 HTML, CSS, JS, ReactJS, C 🚀 Learning by building 🌱 Growing one line of code at a time