My Notes: 1. Leetcode is hard, even for this guy. 2. Repetition is the key, really practice and keep repeating. 3. Internalize the fundamental algorithms(like bs, bfs, dfs, etc) so you have more brain capacity to analyze hard problems 4. Be creative and think hard on creative solutions/test cases 5. Even smart ppl won't get great at leetcode without practicing. That is such a relief to me knowing that I'm not the only poor kid struggle with leetcode to get a job in this market, thank you for the vid!
@fazalshaik35572 ай бұрын
thx
@wolfmibАй бұрын
Nice summary , save a lot tk time 🎉 if you can add 6. suggestion , that’s greater
@eshaanchaturvedi7344Ай бұрын
can you tell me all the fundamental algorithms to practice?
@rubyciide554217 күн бұрын
Nibba I can't even do 2sum after like the 20th tutorial
@thierrybeaulieu44035 ай бұрын
Watching Neetcode talk about Leetcode > Actually Leetcoding
@MnumzanaMoyo5 ай бұрын
😂😂
@someshkarmakar475 ай бұрын
definately true...
@nsjude5 ай бұрын
Real
@timura.66585 ай бұрын
my procrastination spotted
@tigana5 ай бұрын
Accurate
@nikhilseth41444 ай бұрын
Summary: 1) Start with basics and Easy Questions. 2) Repetition is a key. 3) Get good with the algorithms first such as Binary Search, Sliding Window et cetera by doing it again and again and then apply it to the questions. 4) Ask Why while solving the questions - Why this approach or why this solution ? 5) Make notes or give comments.
@akashverma57565 ай бұрын
Practice is the only thing that can make you pro at anything. Giving bare minimum can make you pass college exam, but not real life exam such as Interview.
@programmingloop75 ай бұрын
Practice doesn't make perfect. Practice makes permanent
@hittilp99025 ай бұрын
why did this hit different
@gumbilicious15 ай бұрын
this resonates, but i also feel you are giving the professional world a bit too much credit
@davidchristenes90625 ай бұрын
When I read those comments the only thing I can think off is "what college you went to??". My work is definitely much more easier.
@VARADHARLIKAR-ul1oc5 ай бұрын
@@programmingloop7atleast it takes u somewhere better then u are at right now😊
@s8x.5 ай бұрын
Leetcode is about memorizing how to start a problem but not memorizing the lines of code. And just learning data structures and algorithms is not everything. EDIT: also know helpful builtin methods
@zikorajoe70935 ай бұрын
So how do you start problems
@draskyl94685 ай бұрын
@@zikorajoe7093understanding the problem first, and how to implement the corresponding algorithm/data structure for that specific case. If I give you a problem x and tell you that it can be solved with a basic hashmap You could know all the functions and characteristics that a hashmap has, but if you do not understand the problem and do not know how to use the tools that a hashmap offers you for that problem, you will never be able to solve it. You need to think.
@l501l501l5 ай бұрын
@@zikorajoe7093 identify the potential usage of ds or algorithms for the problems.
@bassycounter5 ай бұрын
@@zikorajoe7093i’m not that great with DSA (yet!) but I think it’s just a matter of being able to think of the problem at hand, figuring out what logic would be most appropriate for the problem, like recursion or loops or whatever, and going from there, implementing the algorithm that makes the most sense (or what may make the most sense to you at that point in time and doing it that way until over time, you become aware of better solutions)
@namankothari11295 ай бұрын
could you also mention a few built in methods that we should know. It would be very helpful, thanks!
@オショニック5 ай бұрын
Repetition is a powerful tool for mastery. You build a solid foundation by repeatedly implementing core algorithms-such as binary search, DFS (Depth-First Search), BFS (Breadth-First Search), and sliding window.
@UserSo4reUsu75ry4 ай бұрын
I'll ask more specifically. There are two tasks: "11. Container With Most Water" and "42. Trapping Rain Water". Having found out the solution the first problem, I was able to reproduce it 7 months later in 40 minutes (alas, I'm slow on the uptake). Having learned the solution to the second problem, I will not be able to reproduce it, because it is not obvious to me. Unfortunately, I don’t know how to convince the brain to understand what it can’t come up with.
@Galuche1L1U4 ай бұрын
I'm fine with those but dynamic programming is fucking me up.
@Anonymous-ri4mk4 ай бұрын
@@UserSo4reUsu75ry try like understanding how the algorithm works completely then do it again going in blind is fine but like algorithms are not something you can learn with just the solutions or the videos solutions in leetcode u gotta search it up and understanding it via youtube, google, github copilot(recently my friend recommended this i havent tried but it is apparently better than chatgpt) just keep looking for information until you fully understand how to apply it
@egg-mv7ef3 ай бұрын
leetcode is worthless. you learn 10x faster by just making projects that utilize these algorithms than mindlessly grinding them like a monkey at the circus.
@Anonymous-ri4mk3 ай бұрын
@@egg-mv7ef a projects does help but leetcode just help your problem solving skill imo idk ever since I tried leetcode I can definitely see the difference it is good for people who don't have super good problem solving skill to develop a more clear process of thinking when coding
@youreyesarebleeding13685 ай бұрын
Leetcode is like going to the gym. If you hit the gym only a few times a year, you aren't going to make any gains. If you do a workout just once, then it's weeks before you do that workout again, you'll be right back where you started. You have to do it consistently and repeat the same types of problems over and over to make gains.
@licokr5 ай бұрын
I was lying on my bed and got up to leave a comment here, my laptop was on my desk... You literally transformed my developer life, in a perfect way. I started my career as a web developer 3 years ago. After three months, I took a new React project, since then, I have been working as a Frontend developer. Last year, I moved abroad and started to seek opportunities abroad. In my country, I already had my job and had network, I didn't worry that much to get a position, more like how much I could get or what company I worked for. One year ago, I started to apply for jobs and I got rejected by all companies I applied - Language may've been the biggest problem though as I started to talk in English since last year. I didn't want to miss opportunities if I got. I tried to solve leetcode several times but I didn't find any interest in it. Actually, I was the person thinking code test is not practical to apply real projects and maybe a waste of time. As a frontend developer, I may've focused on frontend technologies, builders, cloud platforms and stuff like that or better to study DS, and someday, your video came out on my youtube list. Thanks to the algorithm. I actually saw some of your videos early last year but I couldn't understand at all due to my Enlgish proficiency, and last Winter, when your video came out on mylist, I clicked it and I was able to understand a bit and watched your videos. It was an absolutely amazing moment. Your explanation was SO easy, after watching your videos, every problem felt easy to be solved. At around that time, there was a company I was supposed to join but the company asked me to withdraw the contract a couple of weeks before starting to work, they said budget problems but I don't think so. After that, I had to go back to my country, but I really didn't want to GIVE UP. On the first day, I came back to my country, I started to solve Top 150 problems with your videos. As I remember, I couldn't solve most of problems without your help. And at some point, I started to solve some problems by myself and I noticed changes inside me. I started to think first, and come up with some solutions. Like you said, sliding windows, dfs, bfs, some other stuff, while solving problems, I got used to those concepts. I don't need to think about how to implement those stuff. I could just use it as my tool. It's not about memorizing solutions. It's about how to define a problem, how to see a problem and how to apply knowledge I have to solve the problem. It's all about thinking. I also noticed that I apply the same way to solve leetcode problems, when I create UI components in React, write logics and approach errors. I'm still not goot at leetcode and still need to improve A LOT, I know but I felt the positive changes and now I know if I do it, I could do better as time goes, as I put more effort on it. Thank you very much. I'm still looking for a job now but it does not matter, I just do code, I like it and I like those changes. Once again, thank you very much for sharing your experience, knowledge and thought with us. Good night 👍
@ozgurpeynirci45865 ай бұрын
What country are you from and where did you go to?
@aiSage485 ай бұрын
This is really inspiring but please use paragraphs; a wall of text is really difficult to take in... Other than that, it's really nice that you feel more confident in your abilities now, and I hope you soon land a job where you can thrive and be happy.
@licokr5 ай бұрын
@@ozgurpeynirci4586 I'm from South Korea and I was in Germany last year. The company I got the final offer from was based in Vienna.
@licokr5 ай бұрын
@@aiSage48 Oh, man. I didn't know this looks this mess. Something clicked in my head, and I just wrote everything I wanted to say and went to bed. Thanks for the comment and supportive words!
@madhu869185 ай бұрын
Ah Man i really was hoping by the end of your message that you landed a job at Google or something.. anyway best of luck
@asagiai49655 ай бұрын
Having a good knowledge about stacks and queues will give you an edge on dfs and bfs, respectively. Recursion is a good thing to know, too. The problem is that some people jumping the gun, when they haven't grasped the underlying concept of dfs, and bfs? It's like how you know 456 if you don't know 1,2,3
@nousquest5 ай бұрын
You know 456 if you loop in reverse
@samuraijosh15955 ай бұрын
Use python and other functional supported languages to understand recursion better
@asagiai49655 ай бұрын
@@samuraijosh1595 master merge sort
@vigneshs18525 ай бұрын
Yess...Jumping to DP without knowing backtracking.... I done that mistake before
@Anonymous-ri4mk4 ай бұрын
this ^^ i was going in blind and i totally wasted my time had to go and start from hashmap, sliding windows.... realise i was going in without even understanding how to apply or how the solution works 💀wasted a lot of time
@TwiceVisible5 ай бұрын
Leetcode is hard. Copying fireship thumbnails is easy.
@ankleshwarmanidwivedi76954 ай бұрын
Daym
@architkane39664 ай бұрын
This should be pined 😂
@aniket.d073 ай бұрын
I thought on one notice this
@akashdeshpande4350Ай бұрын
I thought this video was by fireship. I realised later.
@peregrin714 ай бұрын
Leetcode is only "imporant" because some bigTech companies use it as a first screening tool. It only addresses a very tiny bit of what a software developer really need to be able to do. Most important are : 1) Be able to write readable/maintainable code. 2) Write unit testable code. 3) Do not optimize prematurely. 4) Be able to work in a team. In fact I would probably not hire most competitive coders, they learned a very low quality of coding and much of that kind of code wouldn't pass any decent codereview. So dear developers out there, being able to solve leetcode puzzles is only one (little) tool in your toolbox :)
@sondosahmed48703 ай бұрын
Do u think it’s not that important ? I am really bad at it and i feel miserable
@SaywhateverI2 ай бұрын
@@sondosahmed4870its very important for getting and passing interviews. Although soft skills are equally as important
@gabegutz11513 ай бұрын
Same. I did pre-med. Now in CS. Leetcode def made pre-med seem like a breeze. Programming requires mathematical creativity. Thanks for this video, sir.
@s8x.5 ай бұрын
Leetcode sums up everything u learned in a CS degree all in one assuming u know the syntax: How to think, the trade offs, then the actual programming part
@Anonymous-ri4mk4 ай бұрын
how to think is a big factor when solving the problems ngl like i used to think super complex ideas realising it wont work the idea is to be familiarized with the code and how to manipulate before you try to fix a problem without proper understanding it is like trying to say something in broken english which u can understand but others wont understand
@GenericInternetter16 күн бұрын
16:22 examples! yes! one of my high school teachers (science? maths?) taught me to always test what you're doing with seven samples: the min and max "correct" values, the "middle" (or expected) value, values that are halfway between the middle and min/max, and finally values that are a little past the min and a little past the max (outside the "correct" range). this advice has helped me immensely over the years with many many things, even in daily life. for example: if i'm lerping an input value between two target values 50 and 125, i'd estimate (guessing *at a glance* without calculating) that the values would be 45, 50, 70, 90, 110, 125, 130 to ensure everything is working correctly, i'd input 0.0, 0.5, 1.0 etc and see if the outputs are as expected. if i see a 200, a 0, or a -50 show up, i instantly know something went very very wrong with the input or how it is processed.
@ImranBrown11 күн бұрын
Subtle thing to add here. 1. Master your language and then master how to use it in a Leetcode environment. There are many functions and things you would never write in production code but if speed is required, you better now how to initialize a 2D matrix with -1's, or maybe a set. How to join arrays of arrays. Neetcode is correct anytime you lose time on the "basics", it will be distracting and will take away time from solving the edge case or deriving the unique trick in that problem. 2. This is job security, especially in this market. Until the industry does not use this as some type of IQ test, keep yourself up to date. Try to do 2 a week AFTER you get a job. That comes out to about 104 questions a year. This is one of the biggest things I see people not do, so they end up restarting and feeling hopeless again because they stop practicing.
@1TL15 ай бұрын
For me leetcode is harder than algebraic geometry
@leafknives5 ай бұрын
it definitely is
@andrewchang71945 ай бұрын
Algebraic geometry is intuitive once you study prerequisite mathematics enough. No amount of fundamental data structures and algorithms prepares you for the type of mind bending solution path that leetcode sends you down 😂
@zanies62885 ай бұрын
For me no. Maybe bcz I never seriously studied algebraic geo lol
@bestredditstories11585 ай бұрын
What is algebraic geometry? I mostly use trig and calculus
@Apuryo5 ай бұрын
it's an upper level pure math course, most people never study it.
@bigbigdog5 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. I always keep this Bruce Lee quote close to my heart: "I fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practiced one kick 10,000 times." It's been a tough few months after layoff with job search and leetcode grinds on top of taking care of the family. But videos like yours keep reminding me to continue the grind and better prepare myself for the challenges ahead.
@andreab0416 күн бұрын
answering questions really goes down to following these steps: 1. Walk through test cases to clarify the problem and what it is doing. 2. Ask clarifying questions, especially about edge cases (a unique/unclear way to handle problem) 3. Pattern Cognition: Big-O Notation (time/space complexity), DSA and identify what to use - Check constraints 4. Implementation: practice the patterns 5. tackle ways to debug (is it a syntax or implementation error?)
@mlk88525 ай бұрын
I'd recommend starting with Exercism, as the problems are much more manageable and you'll learn your language and problem-solving skills in a step-by-step manner. Personally, I followed this approach and had never attempted LeetCode before watching this video. Yet, I was able to solve the median array problem in just 20 minutes. I think this is a great way to develop your problem-solving skills.
@computersciencestudentriverbat5 ай бұрын
Exercism is so good. I love that platform and their KZbin channel. NeetCode & Exercism should do a collab.
@t74devkw5 ай бұрын
Algorithms and data structures, as required in technical interviews and as present in LeetCode, are the subject matter of master’s programs in computer science. Everything beyond a simple binary search is, indeed, not an easy topic at all; it is a very academic topic. What makes it even harder is the fact that the average software engineer, most often than not, has never even opened calculus (e.g., Stewart or Spivak) and algorithms (e.g., Cormen or Skiena) textbooks; it’s only natural that all those algorithms feel alien to someone seeing algorithms for the first time.
@WoWUndad5 ай бұрын
uh bro its not masters, if you want an internship within your first 2 years you need system design, leetcode mediums, and real work projects that arent basic projects. you're supposed to do calculus>discrete math>computer arch so you know how binary works on a motherboard before python. if you dont youre not an engineer at all youre a struggling self proclaimed coder theres a lot more to explain to become a full stack scalable dev that can design and lead sdlc and preferably have a few monetizable niches by year 4 but your comment is a big yikes
@greenprincess5 ай бұрын
@@WoWUndad wth are you on about
@itsjustramblings5 ай бұрын
The coding assessment don't test you algo knowledge but primarily if you can practice and recall from memory when you need to apply algorithms. I come from a non-cs background but even i knew lot of ds and algos but i never faced any hard complicated puzzle that require more than 1 algorithm to solve until about mid-2010's. Once an interviewer asked me a fib series with memoization that allowed me to get past the first round. These days interviews specifically ask hard type problems to weed as many candidates as possible, it is not you but the market. And interviewers are also very impatient and hard to handle these days, if you make a tiny mistake your whole work experience will questioned. It is pathetic.
@levelup20145 ай бұрын
@@WoWUndad I got my first internship through networking at my CS club and applying my skills to 2 projects, the technical interview was simple and they spent more time asking me about my projects and walking through my though process and challenges. Humble yourself, your attitude is common amongst a certain type of CS student that always translate to a negative person to work with when you enter the workforce. You still have time to correct this as I'm assuming your still in college
@programmingloop75 ай бұрын
@@WoWUndad Aren't you proving what he said? You said someone needs calculus in order to do well, that's exactly what he said. You said someone needs a rigorous academic background in order to do well, that's also what he said. You're literally repeating the same thing in different words and then saying his comment was "a big yikes". I don't get you at all
@veronicasmemories13 күн бұрын
this was surprisingly optimistic. Sometimes it's a nice reminder that what we're learning is hard but if we walk through it enough times it'll get easier just like everything else we've learned.
@theFifthMountain1235 ай бұрын
I’m a senior Dev but don’t want to be complacent. Want to keep grinding and will hopefully get into big tech soon. Your video showed up on my feed; will start my Leetcode journey again.
@peregrin714 ай бұрын
Just don't. Leetcode will NOT teach you any of the real important software engineering skills : Writing readable, maintainable, and unit testable code. Competitive coding should not even be called that... it is only about training problem solving skills (and not much of it really relates to things you will do in your software development career)
@Anonymous-ri4mk4 ай бұрын
@@peregrin71 it does improve like the way u think when coding thou so maybe more efficient? since you have to pay attention to time complexity, algorithms and so on
@BennyDeeDevАй бұрын
@@peregrin71 Most corporate Code is just glueing things together, he is already a Senior Dev yet you are advising him to learn "real" important SWE Skills. Hilarious
@manne47955 ай бұрын
I'm really struggling with so many monotonic stack problems and needed to hear this. Thanks!
@JohnSnow-r1e5 ай бұрын
bro what a coincidence i am in the same situation
@manne47955 ай бұрын
I feel the struggle. Monotonic stacks are especially tricky, in particular some problems on leetcode. It does get better over time, but even after doing like 30 problems I'm still not fully comfortable with them. Similar to DP in that regard.
@mangoherpson5 ай бұрын
The older i get the more I realise that this really is the approach you need to life. I practice guitar everyday in order to improve and yet I failed to see how the same concept applies to pretty much anything you want to get good at. Thanks for the wake up call :)
@miramar-1035 ай бұрын
with leetcode its more like having to spend the time learning guitar in order to become a pianist
@mangoherpson5 ай бұрын
@@miramar-103 yep pretty much, prove how good you are at guitar so you are allowed to be paid to play piano 😭
@ShinAkuma3 ай бұрын
I'm once again preparing for a job switch and I am now unable to solve the problems I have already done previously 2-3 years ago. All the basic algos have disappeared from my head now I'm starting from zero once more.
@adityamwagh5 ай бұрын
This is something that I have concluded too. I have been doing LC on and off since the last few years, but I took a concept and did a lot of questions about it. Now I feel I have a good grasp on it. I think people blindly start the NeetCode 150 or Bland 75 lists without first grasping the fundamental concepts properly first.
@Skwod0392jebxnwo5 ай бұрын
Same😊
@ballroomdru5 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for posting this. This is something that I need. You don’t need Leetcode to KEEP your job, but you do need it to GET a job.
@rashzh55025 ай бұрын
"I fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 leetcode problems once, but I fear the man who has practiced one problem 10,000 times." @Neet Lee
@Hmz445 ай бұрын
If you leave KZbin I'm quitting programming. Bravo for explaining how to approach the actual learning. Thank you.
@akshatmishra95745 ай бұрын
Just What I needed after not being able to solve basic problems .....correct me if I missed something : - Major Learnings from this video :- 1) Work On Basics 2) Have a methodology 3) If you learn from a solution ....just practice the same code next day 4) Repeat and Keep practicing 5) those questions day in and day out 5) This will only take you to a certain level above which you need to have a curiosity to know why a particular way code was written .
@pastori26725 ай бұрын
you're right it's all about pattern recognition you see the problem, realize its a bfs/dfs/dp ...etc and solve it it's not like your expected to come up with a new algorithm and even if you are its probably just a combination of the popular ones, you just need consistency
@zanies62885 ай бұрын
That's why you do codeforces, cuz problems aren't that repetitive there
@pastori26725 ай бұрын
@@zanies6288 do you mean contests ?
@education-xn8bk5 ай бұрын
Advice on how to tackle leetcode . leetcode - system , methodologies , process 3:04 , Steps : Do bunch of repetition like - when you used to practices maths multiplication . many times . first target : practices core algo - like binary search , dfs , sliding - implement 5 times 10 times over a period of month second target : why somethings works ? why algo works ? - spend a little bit time think , curious about it . walkl thorough an example using paper and pen . using creative solution , using edge cases . important thing that was done when you were kid - handwritten notes . explainig your thought process , repetition , boring repetition like math enough times . Structures like one hour for english , 1 hour for maths works .
@narendrakumariitb5 ай бұрын
Words of wisdom from a pro leetcoder. 18 mins of priceless advice. Thanks
@Archsage3 ай бұрын
This was an absolute bombshell of growth advice. Absolutely phenomenal! Thank you so much
@Omsamara65 ай бұрын
Reminds of the Woodpecker method for chess training. Spaced repetition of the same problems to drill core patterns into your head. I’m surprised it’s not talked about more for programming
@joedorben35045 ай бұрын
Because none of these methods with chess training actually work (as far as what people want). The reality is, your innate talent is gonna cap anybody who wants to get good. Everyone plateaus around some natural limit, for 99.99% of people who get into chess, that limit is gonna be around 1600-2000, however when someone reaches that level they're gonna want to become a master (2200) which is a far more significant leap than what came before. And if/when anyone becomes a master (again, already extremely few players out of the general population of players), 95% or more won't be able to get much stronger than that. Even just a jump as simple as CM to FM is massively hard for many, and going to IM is huge too. When you reach IM, it feels like GM is within reach, but again it's a massively wide gap which most do not ever manage to cross. But to be honest, even many people who train chess won't even make 2000, which isn't that high anyway. Most who did not play from childhood are going to cap out around 1400-1800, which again is far below where anyone who gets into chess would want (although in online rating they can hit much higher due to the volatility there). Bottomline is, no chess training method is going to be widely or generally used for other fields, because in most cases, it won't even work for chess the way its users want it to.
@Omsamara63 ай бұрын
@@joedorben3504 What complete nonsense lol. The woodpecker method doesn’t work? I’ve personally used it with amazing results. Thousands of others (including GMs. Christopher Yoo big example) with amazing results
@Hachiman-nf6zc5 ай бұрын
4:22 "back in the old day, 2019" damn
@KI-DataGuyАй бұрын
That hit me hard, bruh, it was only a few years ago
@efenestration5 ай бұрын
Thanks for expending the community of competitive programming/leetcode/whatever-this-thing-is-called. I recall finding Euler Project in 2019 and wanting to complete it. But I was just starting to coding back then and didn't really gone into it. Now that I graduated and applying to jobs. I discovered that I am awful and neither creative at applying DSA. I am filling the all these gaps with your service and planning to get really great with it. This does feel like a nice hobby to keep-to while also doing development full time.
@christorok19062 күн бұрын
This actually makes sense. Currently struggling with some “easy” multi pointer problems and feeling stupid. But when it comes to reversing or even MERGING a linked list, no problem! Cuz I know Linked Lists well. It’s trivial.
@valentinrafael92015 ай бұрын
I also play chess and do chess puzzles for fun. There is a method there called "woodpecker method". You solve a chess problem, and then you redo it 10 times before moving to the next ( refreshing the table so you don't see the moves ). It works especially well when the puzzle is longer and has more moves, because when you redo it, you really have to understand it before attempting again.
@sanjeevtamang21235 ай бұрын
you exactly pointed what I was lacking and have been doing. thank you so so much for this video.
@disableblue8835 ай бұрын
Your points does makes sense. I tried Leetcode many times and gave up eventually, maybe in future I will try again keeping these things in mind. Nice content.
@Anonymous-ri4mk4 ай бұрын
starting looking into discrete math and algorithms really helps a ton and make sure u know python concepts up to OOP u should be good to try leetcode again should be faster in thinking up the ideas also try like doing more brain stimulating activities keep thinking i realise this makes a huge difference in how you think like just try looking for mistakes in other people's code etc. keep it running
@egg-mv7ef3 ай бұрын
@@Anonymous-ri4mk leetcode is worthless. you learn 10x faster by just making projects that utilize these algorithms than mindlessly grinding them like a monkey at the circus.
@ekponoambrose19092 ай бұрын
This video did it for me. I have been writing software programs for 6+ years now for small startups and DSA has been the impediment to breaking into big companies because I just go blank whenever I get DSA questions. Saw this video some weeks ago and started practicing DSA fundamentals repeatedly and I can see my confidence level growing and have gotten a little bit better than before. I can't believe I blindly thought I would be good at something without practising it regularly. Thank you NEETCODE
@raindev_5 ай бұрын
This is some solid advice. One thing I'd add is to try hard solving a problem yourself before looking at the solution. It much improves the understanding of the problem even if you don't end up coming up with a solution. The process is frustrating and uncomfortable though :)
@ChrisKSP2 ай бұрын
In high school I was taking an Algebra 2 matrixes test and ran out of time. My teacher chided me for being smart enough to answer the questions I did properly but not practicing my homework enough to do the test assignments fast enough. I think the same lesson is mentioned here. If you want to be able to solve medium questions faster, you need to be practiced at the easy questions that you can get the assignment done faster in a 45 minute interview where you only have 20-30 min to code. And, in a job, it's not so bad to also be able to do fundamentals quickly either. Even if you're not frequently using binary search in your day-to-day, it's still helpful to be able to do a lot of coding tasks quicker because the fundamentals are fresh.
@Siroitin5 ай бұрын
It is also important to understand the "Leetcode mindset". It is similar to when you are trying to understand what your teacher wants you to learn and how to write the "correct answers"
@__prtcl29 күн бұрын
the reason why people don’t practice leetcode for months is because you literally don’t have time. as you get older you have friends, family, consulting work, hobbies, art/music, etc etc. imagine sacrificing all of that just to memorize DFS. now flip that around: do you really want to work for a company that expects you to give up everything worthwhile in life just to pass an interview? it gets worse when you hit senior/staff/manager levels, because all leadership skills require life experience and high EQ, which can only be gained by doing all of the things that you sacrificed to study DFS.
@Hammadisteachingchemistry13 күн бұрын
Ironic
@drstalone11 күн бұрын
I took a job around 8 years ago that paid 20-25% less than continue job hunting that required leetcoding or just plain silly tests, which even after I solve wouldn't land me the job. It gave me time to pursue a lot of my interests, explore relationships, and all that kind of stuff that makes me human. Meanwhile, I even learned Rust. I was and I am still ready to work hard, but the thought of spending hours a day to crack leetcode gives me anxiety unlike doing 'regular' coding, which often puts me into flow. This is important especially as I am entering the second half of my life, and how I invest each moment is going to be very precious. If working hard means losing my emotional health, which in turn will affect physical health, then what do I gain by trying to crack leetcode? But I am willing to try 15 minutes a day that Neetcode suggests to see what happens, but still not that super motivated about it. It may have something to do with what Taleb saysa long these lines: some people often need a purpose to engage your intelligence. It's more likely when it's part of directly solving a problem you are engaged with, rather than something abstract or part of monkeying your way through an interview for better money.
@Hammadisteachingchemistry11 күн бұрын
@@drstalone hey do you suggest this for young people as well, your advice of putting emotional health first really put things into perspective
@smartkorean15 ай бұрын
To a lesser extent, this advice reminds me of my Theory of Computation class. When you’re asked to build a NFA or PDA that recognizes a certain language, the first step is knowing all the basic patterns like how a machine keeps track of even / odd characters, how it detects a substring, how it counts a certain amount of characters. Only after knowing these basic patterns are you able to build more complex machines. And with anyone of these problems, it’s best to write some strings that are in the language and some that are not, along with some edge cases that could break the machine Hopefully someone else can relate and hopefully apply it to their leetcode grind, good luck :)
@mohitchauhan59695 ай бұрын
Similar to me my TOC which requires null transition and regular expression later in CD the parsing technique sucks great.
@cameronbweston5 ай бұрын
Dude, you are the man. This is such invaluable and helpful wisdom. Thanks for sharing.
@FluffersMcFluffleton4 ай бұрын
What got me back into this was actually using DFS in a real world design of building unique paths through a visual drag/drop graph. I'd really pay for something that did this with real projects. Here's some that ended up being real for me: 1. Build a graphical UI that calculates paths through the nodes via the edges and executes a predefined action on each node. 2. Compare the contents of two files. If a line is present in the second file but not the first, treat it as an insert operation. If it is not present in the second but is in the first, treat it as a delete operation. If it is present in both but any values after the first in the csv line are different, treat it as a modification.
@development63745 ай бұрын
Neetcode's videos literally helped me get a job in FAANG in 2022. Listen to him and Git Gud!😄
@aaronwalker54935 ай бұрын
One of the most important videos I've ever seen on this subject. Thanks man!
@andriabavadedisaak3 күн бұрын
Лучшее обучение, поддерживаю Смоука!😈
@minelovesjc28 күн бұрын
This is so true, Most programmers teach themselves and it is challenging because you don't know where to start and where to go after that. It is important to understand the basic algorithms before we attempt to solve a real life or close to real life problems.
@justsomeguy83853 ай бұрын
This is great, thank you. I learned binary search once and then moved onto the next algo. I didn't realize the trick was to grind it until it's burned into my brain so I can focus fully on the rest of the problem. Now I'm going to work on implementing those algos in every language I'm comfortable with(C++, Go, Python, and JS) until the algos are second nature to me. Then I'll move on and see what other algos people are recommending.
@OrphanedZombie5 ай бұрын
I also like the way you enunciate. Your clear explanations become even better when you speak clearly.
@jain-d15 ай бұрын
Thank You Singh sahab. I have been thinking about the why myself lately, and once the why is clear, it is just fun all along.
@dopecode5 ай бұрын
As said by many people 100000 times before also, "Practice makes a man perfect". It's actually true buddy.
@chi945 ай бұрын
Very raw. Great advice. I've done about 100 leetcode questions now and even I still hit a brick wall
@mclwizlon4 ай бұрын
You're really good at articulating your thoughts clearly. That's a skill not easily taught unfortunately
@victormadu16355 ай бұрын
The reason people bash on leetcode or doing/learning DSA is because we depend mostly on libraries people have built. Many atime, depending on the problem/work one is depending, you will still need to develop an algorithm to solve a problem, and the efficient the algorithm is, the better it is for the software you are working on. Improving my DSA knowledge, trying leetcode problems and studying leetcode solutions have been impactful on me. The few engineers i have met that i consider to be amazing are good at DSA (and applying it). They are usually able to build automation tools and make things much more efficient. In summary, DSA and practicing how to apply them are very important for building softwares and tools. Many enginers/evelopers these days hate putting in enough to be better or build better solutions
@LBCreateSpace5 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for posting this. Definitely gives hope ❤
@jloitererАй бұрын
Love your stuff. One thought I had about this was that other subjects such as math are taught when you are very young. Learning things while young is simply easier. Also, to be honest I've learned - and then forgotten - most of the algos because I just never used them on my work. I've been a professional software engineer for almost 30 years. I wrote my first programs 43 years ago.
@obscureautumnfrost3 ай бұрын
Another thing that needs to be discussed is practicing the basic algorithms' variants. At some point, everybody knows how to write Binary Search, BFS, DFS, etc., but knowing the variants of each of these algorithms is equally important.
@TurtleOrTurtel2 ай бұрын
So encouraging and makes sense. Thanks for sharing!
@Ayman_youtube5 ай бұрын
I think also leetcode is hard because you have to think about all the test cases possible and make a general solution that works for all of them , coming up with an unexpected test case is so hard for me
@RomanTokarenko3 ай бұрын
Mate, you are really good in finding these common principles of working with Leetcode. Thank you.
@VaibhavPrasad5 ай бұрын
Consistency and practice is something we often ignore, it was really good watching u explain all that in such detail. 💯
@viveksoni32695 ай бұрын
Today we have to be good in competitive programming, core DSA(leetcode), development, cs fundamentals, experience everything to land a job.
@GoogleUser-uv9bo5 ай бұрын
Hey there! Did u completed neetcode 150?
@smellthel3 ай бұрын
I just started Leetcode. I was humbled so much lol.
@bossfly83874 ай бұрын
I am bad at leetcode but we all need to get away from the mindset that it is useless to grind. It starts instilling this framework in your mind that can start identifying patterns not just here but also in your daily coding work. Now can companies stop using this as the gold standard to judge coding capability. Yes absolutely!
@Hys-015 ай бұрын
The 'mistakes' you discussed here perfectly described my current approach to LC. You provided such a quick and concise way of fixing it too, thanks a lot Neetcode!
@slizverg235 ай бұрын
There are some topics that require a deep understanding and a repetition along won’t help unless something “clicked” in your brain. I tried to solve a “Subsets” problem recently and I couldn’t do it. Then I went to “submissions” section and saw that I solved it a like a 15 times a year ago:) Backtracking is just so hard for me, but I guess I’m starting to get it…
@jonaskhanwald5665 ай бұрын
+1 exactly the same, suggest if you are following any methodologies to understand it.
@zanies62885 ай бұрын
Backtracking becomes easier after you start solving dp problems
@younussaberi87684 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing!!. At the end of the day, only practicing and repetition can help to level up and get good at Leetcoding
@chan4est5 ай бұрын
Okay break time over. Time to do more neetcode. But seriously..this is all true. Been grinding for a little over a month now and I'm starting to build confidence since I'm able to complete mediums by myself more frequently. Not every single time, but more than last month. Pen and paper + writing out my own examples helped a lot. Hopefully within the month some offers are at my desk.
@XX-ri1me3 ай бұрын
I have created a project with my IDE where I add a unit test for each LeetCode problem I want to solve. I can add a value set to test with a one liner and debug specific cases with a full debugger. This also helps you improve using your specific work environment.
@Xcaliber_155 ай бұрын
I am greatful to have come across this video and as you mentioned about the habits we had as a kid can make so much difference if you countinue to do so as an adult, it was a video I needed most and covered the points why I am lacking as a leetcoder. I was doing well in math and physics like you but find coding very hard and boring, the thing I forget here is that as a child I used to practice a lot and thought of myself as a talented indivisual cause I was able to solve problems related to math and physics, so the "I am talented" mindset took me nowhere in my coding journey but they say better late than never so I will surely follow your advice :). Also wanted to add a point that if you are really good with basics then only you will question the reality of things as to why do things work that way and if you are struggling with basics then you tend to pounder over it and stop working on it was can be due to bordem of not getting to understand those thing.
@wenxicheng784719 күн бұрын
This is the first video I watched from you. And I just wanna say. So fuxxing true
@aakashs18065 ай бұрын
Summary : Practice, repetitions
@mostinho75 ай бұрын
Useless video unlike almost all his other vids
@damercy5 ай бұрын
You sir, are a hero. Thank you.
@tanmesh28202 ай бұрын
you unlocked my thinking regarding this ! Thanks bro
@altgov3en5 ай бұрын
Hooah! This video motivated me to go back to basics!
@Elderscrolls455 ай бұрын
leetcode is not a waste, timing the problems to 45 mins is.. The rpblem solving is never a waste of time, and I can understand the timing aspect of it during interviews, it helps them filter candidates out but it is not a fail safe approach. Some grind leetcode to a point that they come across same problem during interview and can solve in 40 mins while others take time and make minor mistake. So leetcode is not a waste of time, jogs your memory, makes your think, the interview process is broken.
@neilbohr60155 ай бұрын
i did the exact thing in l
@rajrajesh16695 ай бұрын
Damn that reply to someone in the intro was everything I needed to hear after couple of my friends said the same things to me😂... Best reply ever...
@xddenjoyer5245 ай бұрын
"I'm not afraid of someone who studies 10,000 different strikes. I'm afraid of the one who studies one blow 10,000 times." - Bruce Lee
@orepajic26252 ай бұрын
I think the thing with maths is for most problems you know what you should do , meaning you are already told in the question what to do. In the problems where you develop problem solving skills, there is still a finite amount of things you can do. In Leetcode, unless you are explicitly told or somehow found out by yourself that certain problems are always done in more or less the same way, it will be really hard to come up with an idea
@nexusboyko5 ай бұрын
"It's that a lot of the things you did as a kid and maybe you stopped doing as an adult that were very, very useful to you, like taking handwritten notes, explaining your thought process, repetition, even boring repetition" This.
@I61void4 ай бұрын
That makes sense with a lot of things tbh. Being consistent and practicing daily. I had taken a course for web developement in javascript and for some reason I wanted to use C++ to start leetcode. Anyways I had already learned the concepts and basics like how a loop works and how to write a loop in javascript (follow along) but when i got to c++ it took me like 30 minutes to write a loop using a reference for fizzbuzz on leetcode. Even though I already knew how it worked. Now I can write a loop in several languages in seconds, its almost like second nature, like counting 1, 2, 3. When I first started leetcode I could solve like two easy questions a day and now I can solve like 10 easy/mediums in like an hour or two. Same thing when I tried learning BFS/DFS and some other algorithms. I had trouble, I took maybe an hour to solve one but after I solved it I took notes, moved to the next one and solved it in like 15 minutes, the next one in like 3 minutes and so on (easy and mediums). The only thing that is holding me back tbh is being lazy, I haven't submitted anything since like May, so yeah be consistent with it and you will see results. (And taking notes, i didn't mention much of its importance either, but I like to write the notes as comments next to my code to explain what each line of code does in a more simplified manner)
@tasmisa67785 ай бұрын
I'm just glad someone brought up leetcode is 😶🌫️😶🌫️😶🌫️ draining hard, I thought there are genius and here is me
@lukwagoimmanuel30515 ай бұрын
Immanuel from Uganda hia I like the way you've talked about the repetition and the learning of basics before you grind LeetCode part of it I gat U.......
@jolli31425 ай бұрын
Thanks for your content, it helps a lot. Have a dream to work at Netflix and know that you have to study hard for this. But it's really difficult to find time to do it as I try to reach backend side (I'm frontend developer and did't find appropriate positions). Anyway, it improves your brain at least.
@Codewithvick4 ай бұрын
One of the best videos explaining Leetcode complexity.
@LasTCursE695 ай бұрын
Anyone who says that leetcoding is useless is not a real programmer.. You are literally practicing coding and learning new ways to solve different problems, that is a core of what you do on a daily basis as an engineer... SOLVING PROBLEMS!! 👀
@brhnkh5 ай бұрын
The most useful advice/observation(s) happens at 17:20 onwards
@cat-codes1on14 ай бұрын
Thanks Neetcode, now i know where i was lacking, and i thought i cracked jee with 97.6 percentile, in top 3% of students and thought leetcode would be easy game but when i am not able to solve questions and my peer solved easily i thought my iq is low, but now i get to know where i was lacking... thanks mate i will aply this method from now onwards
@mj64005 ай бұрын
Summary of Video: - It’s about systems - repetition - understand core algos - binary search - dfs - bfs - sliding - create your own example use cases
@jaisuriyar52594 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video. Helped me confirming I'm on the right path.
@okATAnTEDiGeRNin5 ай бұрын
Thanks man. This video is truly a gem. I get your ideas and will act accordingly.
@R7ram5 ай бұрын
Felt good when u said "its not your fault" thanks man helpfull insights 🤙🏻
@mohamedayman73965 ай бұрын
data structure and *algorithms* are crucial for my job "data science" so honestly leetcode does help and it refreshes my coding skills, also codewars been pretty awesome and I prefer it over leetcodes, it's only problem is that it doesn't have as many content but that's because it's not as popular as leetcode
@sahu_SuMiT3 ай бұрын
Awesome and I am watching it for the third time without any skipping