Комментарии:
You are very good at explaining stuff. It would have great if we could watch at some code example as well, simple ones.
ОтветитьSo where is the code
Ответитьuseful, thanks
ОтветитьThanks
ОтветитьStraightforward analogy. But what's an example of a use case for stacks and queues? In what type of scenario would I need to use a stack?
ОтветитьThat octopus looks real busy. Good work explaining this.
ОтветитьBrilliant explanation, thank you
ОтветитьVery easy to understand. Would like to see some coding examples too but this is nice. I have been a developer for 6 years and i'm just now getting into data structures. However i'm realizing that i've basically been using them all along without knowing it.
ОтветитьThese videos are great and the visuals help a lot. The black background in your videos seems to improve memory recall for some reason as opposed to a white background. Its easier to visualize what I saw from your videos, than others because of this and it does not burn your retinas out while watching them either lol.
ОтветитьThank you
ОтветитьThanks a lot this was extremely helpful
ОтветитьI was just stuck on that problem at the end, thanks!
ОтветитьFavorite quote: "That's how pancakes in the real world work."
ОтветитьThank you!
ОтветитьHow have I not found this channel before now?
ОтветитьDuring a stack pop operation, is the top value deleted first and the value of "top" decremented after, or is it the other way around?
ОтветитьGreat video..you got it right a Deque is actually called a "Deck" or Double Ended Queue so many people get it wrong an call it a "De Que" then get it confused with Enque/Deque.
ОтветитьHi Dojo! thank you for the cool video. I got a lot information from this. But program do you use to make such kind interesting animation when you click the info under the image appears with cool animation.
Ответитьmy friend says he likes your sweater; keep it up man! :)
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