TanayShukla
CSE specialization in AI & ML | PR Head of The Indian Society for Technical Education(ISTE) |
India
Pinned Repositories
Azure
Codeshow-100days_of_code
Rules In our version, of 100DaysOfCode, you need to do anything that helps you enhance your tech stack i.e. competitive coding, try learning a new language, read technical articles/ books, make open source contributions, add features to a personal project, etc. It's okay if you are not able to submit a pull request someday, you can resume it the next day, you will still be in the competition. Remember, life is not a sprint but a marathon, so is the path to learning and growning. Keep defining your short term goals (measurable) and strive hard to achieve them. (Eg. Getting better at competitive coding is not a measurable goal but achiving 2000 rating in Codechef is measurable) Update everyday progress and submit a pull request. (Optional) Follow 100DaysOfCode Twitter Bot that retweets the tweets that contain the #100DaysOfCode hashtag and timely tweet your progress with #100DaysOfCode hashtag. Try to add detailed description of what you did, add corresponding links, if you solve questions, you can add your codes in the same folder and provid a link in the README (not for active contests). We start the marathon on January 1, 2020. feel free to add your goals beforehand (they can also be added later). Benefits Coding will become a daily habit for you. Every day that you consistently code, you’ll build momentum. That momentum will make it easier for you to learn more advanced topics. The projects that you’ll build will be small in scope, so by the time you finish, you’ll have completed several of them — and gained a wide range of experience. Your GitHub profile will look extremely active. And yes, hiring managers and recruiters do look at these. You’ll get more comfortable contributing in open soruce. It will become a natural, ordinary thing to do. You’ll have a pretty good reason to stop procrastinating and start coding every day. Increase your efficiency by checking your daily progress and analysing it. Compare your progress with others and surpass your limits in learning each day. Recognition You will be provided with certificates on successful completiton of 100DaysOfCode. At the end of each month, goodies will be given to the top performers. A big surprise for the overall top performers in 100DaysOfCode. Note: Only the students in MNIT/ IIIT Kota/ NIT UK are elligible for prizes/ certificates. Pre-requisites Markdown: You need to update your README in Markdown (a lightweight markup language with plain text formatting syntax). No need to learn it you can always refer to the guide or use an online markdown editor. Basic git Basic knowledge of git and its workflow is a must. If you are not comfortable, feel free to ask for help. How to participate Fork the repository. In your fork, make a folder by the name of your github account. In your folder, make a file with the name README.md We have also provided a template which you can follow to set up README.md Update the progress in your README and submit a pull request. If you need more clarification, feel free to reach us at telegram.
hacking-tutorials
hacking-tutorials hacking-tutorials A Hacking tutorial collection. Most stuff is outdated. ONLY for educational purposes.
Languages
You can learn Different programing language here
Movie-Recommender-System
A content based movie recommender system using cosine similarity.
Olympics-Data-Analysis
A Streamlit web application for the analysis of olympics dataset Dataset Link: https://www.kaggle.com/heesoo37/120-years-of-olympic-history-athletes-and-results
Random
This is a collection of Random source codes, unorganized. For EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY Many projects are duplicates or revisions of each other. Many of them have outdated depedencies. My goal is to collectively put them together so that they are compilable and help people interested in malware research analyze them and learn from these samples.
SMS-Spam-Classifier
TanayShukla
Tanay Shukla Portfolio
Web_Development
This repository hosts the Web Development Standard. Code of conduct We are committed to providing a friendly, safe and welcoming environment for all. Please read and respect the WHATWG Code of Conduct. Contribution opportunities We appreciate all contributions, see the guidelines for contributing for details, including information on how to build HTML output from the source file so you can preview your changes locally. Tests Tests are in the html/ directory of the web-platform-tests repository. Blame As the source file is too large for GitHub's blame utility, use blame for source on searchfox instead.
TanayShukla's Repositories
TanayShukla/hacking-tutorials
hacking-tutorials hacking-tutorials A Hacking tutorial collection. Most stuff is outdated. ONLY for educational purposes.
TanayShukla/Languages
You can learn Different programing language here
TanayShukla/Random
This is a collection of Random source codes, unorganized. For EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY Many projects are duplicates or revisions of each other. Many of them have outdated depedencies. My goal is to collectively put them together so that they are compilable and help people interested in malware research analyze them and learn from these samples.
TanayShukla/TanayShukla
Tanay Shukla Portfolio
TanayShukla/Web_Development
This repository hosts the Web Development Standard. Code of conduct We are committed to providing a friendly, safe and welcoming environment for all. Please read and respect the WHATWG Code of Conduct. Contribution opportunities We appreciate all contributions, see the guidelines for contributing for details, including information on how to build HTML output from the source file so you can preview your changes locally. Tests Tests are in the html/ directory of the web-platform-tests repository. Blame As the source file is too large for GitHub's blame utility, use blame for source on searchfox instead.
TanayShukla/Azure
TanayShukla/Codeshow-100days_of_code
Rules In our version, of 100DaysOfCode, you need to do anything that helps you enhance your tech stack i.e. competitive coding, try learning a new language, read technical articles/ books, make open source contributions, add features to a personal project, etc. It's okay if you are not able to submit a pull request someday, you can resume it the next day, you will still be in the competition. Remember, life is not a sprint but a marathon, so is the path to learning and growning. Keep defining your short term goals (measurable) and strive hard to achieve them. (Eg. Getting better at competitive coding is not a measurable goal but achiving 2000 rating in Codechef is measurable) Update everyday progress and submit a pull request. (Optional) Follow 100DaysOfCode Twitter Bot that retweets the tweets that contain the #100DaysOfCode hashtag and timely tweet your progress with #100DaysOfCode hashtag. Try to add detailed description of what you did, add corresponding links, if you solve questions, you can add your codes in the same folder and provid a link in the README (not for active contests). We start the marathon on January 1, 2020. feel free to add your goals beforehand (they can also be added later). Benefits Coding will become a daily habit for you. Every day that you consistently code, you’ll build momentum. That momentum will make it easier for you to learn more advanced topics. The projects that you’ll build will be small in scope, so by the time you finish, you’ll have completed several of them — and gained a wide range of experience. Your GitHub profile will look extremely active. And yes, hiring managers and recruiters do look at these. You’ll get more comfortable contributing in open soruce. It will become a natural, ordinary thing to do. You’ll have a pretty good reason to stop procrastinating and start coding every day. Increase your efficiency by checking your daily progress and analysing it. Compare your progress with others and surpass your limits in learning each day. Recognition You will be provided with certificates on successful completiton of 100DaysOfCode. At the end of each month, goodies will be given to the top performers. A big surprise for the overall top performers in 100DaysOfCode. Note: Only the students in MNIT/ IIIT Kota/ NIT UK are elligible for prizes/ certificates. Pre-requisites Markdown: You need to update your README in Markdown (a lightweight markup language with plain text formatting syntax). No need to learn it you can always refer to the guide or use an online markdown editor. Basic git Basic knowledge of git and its workflow is a must. If you are not comfortable, feel free to ask for help. How to participate Fork the repository. In your fork, make a folder by the name of your github account. In your folder, make a file with the name README.md We have also provided a template which you can follow to set up README.md Update the progress in your README and submit a pull request. If you need more clarification, feel free to reach us at telegram.
TanayShukla/DSA
TanayShukla/Movie-Recommender-System
A content based movie recommender system using cosine similarity.
TanayShukla/Olympics-Data-Analysis
A Streamlit web application for the analysis of olympics dataset Dataset Link: https://www.kaggle.com/heesoo37/120-years-of-olympic-history-athletes-and-results
TanayShukla/SMS-Spam-Classifier
TanayShukla/datasets
TanayShukla/Fashion-Recommendation-System-using-Image-Features
TanayShukla/HousePricePrediction
TanayShukla/LEETCODE
TanayShukla/test_db
A sample MySQL database with an integrated test suite, used to test your applications and database servers
TanayShukla/WineQualityPrediction
TanayShukla/YOLO-Drowsiness-Detection
A lightweight walkthrough accompanying the video on Drowsiness Detection using Ultralytics YOLOv5