From 07ba41ab4a5c4d7e729426fa2de3484019c45169 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Schildt Date: Thu, 13 Oct 2016 09:28:47 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] Improve readability of a text chapter - Improve readability of a text chapter. - Convert indentation space characters to a list items. Result: - More readable Markdown rendering on the GitHub page. - More consistent with rest of the page structure. --- README.md | 18 +++++++++--------- 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index d834feb..7b7b19b 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -302,17 +302,17 @@ technologies but were not mentioned in those notes: Some subjects take one day, and some will take multiple days. Some are just learning with nothing to implement. Each day I take one subject from the list below, watch videos about that subject, and write an implementation in: - C - using structs and functions that take a struct * and something else as args. - C++ - without using built-in types - C++ - using built-in types, like STL's std::list for a linked list - Python - using built-in types (to keep practicing Python) - and write tests to ensure I'm doing it right, sometimes just using simple assert() statements - You may do Java or something else, this is just my thing. +- C - using structs and functions that take a struct * and something else as args. +- C++ - without using built-in types +- C++ - using built-in types, like STL's std::list for a linked list +- Python - using built-in types (to keep practicing Python) +- and write tests to ensure I'm doing it right, sometimes just using simple assert() statements +- You may do Java or something else, this is just my thing. Why code in all of these? - Practice, practice, practice, until I'm sick of it, and can do it with no problem (some have many edge cases and bookkeeping details to remember) - Work within the raw constraints (allocating/freeing memory without help of garbage collection (except Python)) - Make use of built-in types so I have experience using the built-in tools for real-world use (not going to write my own linked list implementation in production) +- Practice, practice, practice, until I'm sick of it, and can do it with no problem (some have many edge cases and bookkeeping details to remember) +- Work within the raw constraints (allocating/freeing memory without help of garbage collection (except Python)) +- Make use of built-in types so I have experience using the built-in tools for real-world use (not going to write my own linked list implementation in production) I may not have time to do all of these for every subject, but I'll try.