Prince

1.4K posts

Prince

Prince

@prince_cpp

19 I CS'29 lazy with ambitions

เข้าร่วม Mart 2026
365 กำลังติดตาม74 ผู้ติดตาม
ทวีตที่ปักหมุด
Prince
Prince@prince_cpp·
Dear seniors, As my first year came to an end and second year will start in few months could you please tell me what should I focus on in my second year like core sub , DSA , GATE , specific domain etc . I hope you all could give guidance and remove my confusion
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Prince
Prince@prince_cpp·
@athrix_codes bhai landing me bahut prblm hoti hai har baar crash ho jata hai
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Athrix ☄️
Athrix ☄️@athrix_codes·
The best silently feature added by Google Earth 🐐 Flight Simulator ✈️ you can fly above from any place Now our childhood dream, To fly above every city comes to true ❤️
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Prince
Prince@prince_cpp·
@s4h7m I couldn't even solder two wires cleanly
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Soham
Soham@s4h7m·
Tried soldering for the first time :)
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Bhargav Mahajan
Bhargav Mahajan@BhargavLearns·
I am starting with Oops in python today. Drop some tips!!!
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Vedant Reddy
Vedant Reddy@vedantReddy45·
Mummy ke hath ki misal pav 😋😋
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Bhargav Mahajan
Bhargav Mahajan@BhargavLearns·
Recently, while learning Python, I discovered some subtle points that have changed the way I view Python: 1) Reference: Unlike other programming languages, Python variables are not containers that hold a value. Instead, Python variables are pointers that refer to an object. A mind-blowing example to understand why this matters: a = [1,2,3] b = a a.append (4) #This returns None btw print(a,b) Many people might think that after this, a = [1, 2, 3, 4] while b remains [1,2,3], but that's exactly why we should learn more about references. In reality, both variables point to the same object in memory; thus, both will be the same list object with the same elements. 2) Mutability & Immutability: In Python, mutability and immutability are crucial concepts. While references are a big part of this discussion, using the same example for strings helps to clarify this concept even better. a = "1, 2, 3" b = a b= b. replace ("1", "2") print(a,b) The result here will differ! While a will remain "1,2,3 ", but b will become "2, 2, 3" because "strings are immutable!" This is significant because any operation on an immutable object creates a new object. Therefore, when a method is performed on b, b will refer to a new object. 3) list methods: Do you know that some list methods return new objects? If you want a new list, you can concatenate lists or copy a list using the. copy () method. These techniques help create new lists, which can be very useful. 4) Python & its objects: Everything in Python is an object. From functions to modules to generators, everything is an object. This means their names should follow the same rules as variable names, and you can pass them into other functions or your main function as needed. 5) Scopes: When you assign a variable in Python and print that variable, Python does something very interesting. Example: x = 10 #global def name(): x = 12 #enclosing def name _ 2 (): x = 13 #local name_2() name() Here, Python first checks for a local variable (inside the inner function), then for an enclosing variable (inside the outer function), then for a global variable (outside the functions), and finally for built- in variables. Now, Python will surprise you with a tricky moment! If you write: x = 12 def n(): Print (x) x = 10 It will return an error! Because Python checks for local variables first, it is printing x before assigning a value to X. I hope reading this tweet would give you some aha moments!!!
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Prince
Prince@prince_cpp·
@mihir_twt I think its important for your skill development
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mihir
mihir@mihir_twt·
the stuff i have to do for 2 social internship credits 😭 > 1 month internship with an NGO > go to a school and talk about AI and Career Options > do a 15 hour course on social work > maintain a logbook and prepare a report a very different summer than what i had planned
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biased indian
biased indian@RakeshK32229480·
WTF, I just realized one of my favorite YouTubers cleared the UPSC and became an IAS officer. Bro going to do public service now.
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Prince
Prince@prince_cpp·
@mihir_twt japanese and chinese are very tough , spanish won't give you any edge
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Prince
Prince@prince_cpp·
@Spidey_707 kahi aap khud hi to nhi punch rhe ho
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SPIDEY
SPIDEY@Spidey_707·
😂
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Vedant Reddy
Vedant Reddy@vedantReddy45·
POV:- You don't have no one to open up so you yapp on X
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Prince รีทวีตแล้ว
Varun Guru
Varun Guru@iamvarunguru·
@QOSMIC__Space is building laser-based communication for satellites. Which can transmit data 100X faster than traditional RF systems. And do this at fraction of the cost. They've already tested this entire system across a 10 km link on Earth. Their system basically has two critical infrastructures. First is Argus - which is an optical ground station designed to track satellites with extreme precision and receive the laser signals carrying their data. Second is Zaphod - which is simply a tiny device that transmits data through a precisely aimed laser beam. Now, the only problem with laser-based communications is the weather. If there are clouds between the ground station and satellites - it can disrupt communication. But they have a simple solution to this problem. They can just spread out their ground stations at multiple locations. So if their are clouds over one region, the satellite can simply beam the data to another ground station. Btw Starlink uses the same technology to provide internet speeds of up to 200 Gbps. This is the same technology that we'll need to build at scale when we start building orbital data centers in space. And this is exactly what @Jain_Shrey_ and his team at Qosmic Space are trying to do.
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Shrey Jain@Jain_Shrey_

We've raised $3.33 Million to build the Optical highway to the Cosmos. Led by @AccelIndia and @Prosus_Ventures and given foundational and early support by @southpkcommons, @artparkindia and Manish Jain. Space is going from an endeavor to an economy. The world is racing to build the satellites of tomorrow, but still using the infrastructure of yesterday to talk to them. At @QOSMIC__Space our goal is to fundamentally solve this problem from an infrastructural lens, and build the backbone of communication for humanity's final frontier. A decade ago this company gets built in the US or Europe. We built it in Bangalore. All three of us left careers abroad to come back, because India now has the capital, the manufacturing depth, and the institutions to build world-class space infrastructure. We came back because this is now the right place to build it, and we will not be the last founders to make that choice. Building this with @RohitKR79 and @aalokelab . We are just getting started. Onwards and Upwards. @ACCEL @spc_india @prateekmehta42 @ankitcc @adityaag @akhi_agarwal @nayankote @_pagarwal @artparkindia @iiscbangalore @JPBrebner

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भरत
भरत@HelloitsBharat·
Going to expose a 1st year guy very soon...maybe nhi bhi kr skta kyuki uski harkate aisi hai ki koi or kr hi dega😋
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Srajan
Srajan@_Creation22·
🚨 BREAKING NEWS 🚨 Scientists have found that consuming 20g of creatine before solving LeetCode Hards increases acceptance rates by 69% Source: Personal experience Trust me, bro!!! 😤💪
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