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Sazoks2020-09-30 10:55:40
Books
Sazoks, 2020-09-30 10:55:40

Is it worth reading 2 books on programming in parallel?

I started reading Schlee's book on Qt5, but, having entered the university and met the guys from senior courses, I realized that I was very interested in the field of Data Science. I immediately downloaded the book "Deep learning. Dive into the world of neural networks" by S. Nikolenko and also began to study it.
But the question immediately arose, am I doing the right thing? Will there be porridge in the head?
What do you advise?

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5 answer(s)
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d-sem, 2020-09-30
@Sazoks

Costs. Even more. Over time, you can come to the conclusion that there are a dozen books with bookmarks on the bookshelf, which are first skimmed through, and then read and reread as necessary. It is very interesting to observe old school professors with large libraries. They often have this kind of reading mode: read, take notes, come back again.
And porridge depends on the individual organization of thinking. Some can, some can't. From the good - it trains.

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Alexander Pikeev, 2020-09-30
@Baryon

Costs.

D
dollar, 2020-09-30
@dollar

If you clearly separate areas of knowledge for yourself, then everything will be fine. Just don't literally read at the same time. First one at least an hour (or a day), ignoring the second, and then the second also, ignoring the first. Soon you will understand in which mode you are most comfortable.

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kk95, 2020-10-05
@kk95

At the institute, students read 5-6 books in parallel. Worth reading 2? If everything is ok with health, why not?

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Adamos, 2020-09-30
@Adamos

The book "The Mythical Man-Month" must be read in duplicate in parallel. It helps a lot to understand the material in the book.

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