this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2024
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I'm trying to make minesweeper using rust and bevy, but it feels that my code is bloated (a lot of for loops, segments that seem to be repeating themselves, etc.)

When I look at other people's code, they are using functions that I don't really understand (map, zip, etc.) that seem to make their code faster and cleaner.

I know that I should look up the functions that I don't understand, but I was wondering where you would learn stuff like that in the first place. I want to learn how to find functions that would be useful for optimizing my code.

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[โ€“] grue@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

What you're asking about (how to learn clever techniques to e.g. turn your naive O(n^2^) algorithm into an O(n log n) one) is the kind of stuff taught in an algorithms / theory course as part of a CS degree. Here are some of the first search results for open content courses I found that look like they cover the right topics:

https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/18-404j-theory-of-computation-fall-2020/pages/syllabus/

http://openclassroom.stanford.edu/MainFolder/CoursePage.php?course=IntroToAlgorithms

You also might want to consider a combinatorics / discrete math course.

[โ€“] NostraDavid@programming.dev 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

In case others want to get into 18.404j, but don't have the prerequisite knowledge, I made a pretty complete graph of all available MIT courses (at least until 2023) and linked them as a left-to-right dependency graph:

https://thaumatorium.com/articles/mit-courses/mit.drawio.svg

Just search for 18.404j - it's an SVG, so search works.