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Ways to replenish lives.

Unfortunately, when taking Python courses, I began to notice that I was making more mistakes and learning the material worse. In addition, due to the lack of VIP versions, you will not be given a good chance to practice for better understanding of certain operators. You start to make more and more mistakes and not understand. Who encounters this? Are there ways to replenish your lives? Which ones can you recommend to me? I don't want to lose my streak!

16th Jan 2025, 9:19 AM
Nngidaller
Nngidaller - avatar
3 Respostas
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I don't really like your answer. Chewed, abstract advice without specific courses, books, and other sources of information.
16th Jan 2025, 1:52 PM
Nngidaller
Nngidaller - avatar
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it's not abstract. You want to be a programmer. Be proactive and resourceful. If you're doing it for rewards and streak points, you already lost sight your main goal --- learning. You are making mistakes because you really didn't understand what you thought you 'learned'. You're just making it harder for yourself going forward with shaky foundations. But since it's not helpful, I'll delete my previous reply. maybe some other member will come and help you maintain your streak. I would probably just reset the course and start from the beginning again. also, streak saver is a thing.
16th Jan 2025, 2:05 PM
Bob_Li
Bob_Li - avatar
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If using free version, lives replenish daily at midnight local time. If you are having trouble with a particular concept or operator, swipe backwards to previous slides and look at comments. Often your fellow users will post clarifications, examples, or outside links. If you are still confused or want to learn more, open a browser tab and do a web search for the topic. Stackoverflow, Quora, or blog entries on some tutorial site are all good links to check. You can also go back to previous slide with a Code Playground, erase what is there, and write your own test code to play around with an operator or such. Such practice is good way to make sure the code actually behaves the way you think it does.
16th Jan 2025, 5:29 PM
Shardis Wolfe