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Repository Details

the learning curve

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1

capstone-1

HTML/CSS & JavaScript Capstone Project
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Javascript-Group-Capstone

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AwesomeBooksES6

"Awesome books" is a simple website that displays a list of books and allows you to add and remove books from that list. By building this application, I learn how to manage data using JavaScript. Thanks to that the website will be more interactive. I will also use a medium-fidelity wireframe to build the UI.
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4

awesomeBooks

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5

To-Do-List-Project

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hotel-room-frontend

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7

youtube

youtube clone
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8

odete-portfolio

Felix Odete's Portfolio
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9

odin-recipes

First Odin Project
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10

parcel-experiment

A simple npm package to learn about using npm
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11

Website

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12

Styles-Conference

Conference Website
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13

webpack-template

Building a simple yet powerful webpack boilerplate, which can later use as a starting point in projects.
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14

hello-microverse

"Hello Microverse" project
HTML
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15

portfolio-bootstrap

portfolio made with bootstrap
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16

portfolio

Felix Odete's Portfolio
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17

A-Visual-History-of-Nobel-Prize-Winners

The Nobel Prize is perhaps the world's most well known scientific award. Every year it is given to scientists and scholars in chemistry, literature, physics, medicine, economics, and peace. The first Nobel Prize was handed out in 1901, and at that time the prize was Eurocentric and male-focused, but nowadays it's not biased in any way. Surely, right? Well, let's find out! What characteristics do the prize winners have? Which country gets it most often? And has anybody gotten it twice? It's up to you to figure this out. The dataset used in this project is from The Nobel Foundation on Kaggle.
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18

Leaderboard

In this activity you will set up a JavaScript project for the Leaderboard list app, using webpack and ES6 features, notably modules. You should develop a first working version of the app following a wireframe, but without styling - just focus on functionality. In following activities, you will consume the Leaderboard API using JavaScript async and await and add some styling.
JavaScript
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19

datasciencecoursera

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20

sg_ml_254

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21

Australian-DETE-and-TEFA-Exit-Survey-Analysis

Clean And Analyze Employee Exit Surveys
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22

cars-csv

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23

Code-Review-To-Do-List-Project

Peer code review for DRY, KISS, & YAGNI, JS, HTML, & CSS best practices.
JavaScript
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24

zibber

JavaScript
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25

clinic-db

Database based on real world example
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26

metrics-app

JavaScript
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27

Machine-Learning

Tips on machine learning techniques with worked examples, preseted in notebooks.
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28

To-Do-List-Tests

Testing for app.
JavaScript
1
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29

Fizz-Buzz-TDD

Ruby
1
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30

testing-practice

Write unit tests for a JavaScript app. Use AAA pattern for unit tests. Explain why testing code is important.
JavaScript
1
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31

felixodette

1
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32

Cricket

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33

Exploring-Hacker-News-Posts

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34

Amazon-API

JavaScript
1
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35

Stopwatch

1
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36

try-gitflow

Gitflow practice!
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37

MobProgramming

1
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38

math-magicians

JavaScript
1
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39

curriculum-buggy-restaurant

JavaScript
1
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40

Profitable-App-Profiles

Finding mobile app profiles that are profitable for the App Store and Google Play markets
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1
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41

OOP-School-Library

A school library app.
Ruby
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42

The-Android-App-Market-on-Google-Play

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43

Covid-19-Analysis

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44

python-problems

Solutions to basicproblems using python
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45

JavaScriptDates

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46

titanic

Predicting Survivors of the Titanic - ML
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47

safaricom_stock

Statistics for Financial Analysis with Python | Stock Market Machine Learning
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48

eBay-Kleinanzeigen-Analysis

An analysis of a dataset of used cars from eBay Kleinanzeigen, a classifieds section of the German eBay website.
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49

OOP-Curriculum-Code-Ruby

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50

react-todo-app

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51

protecht-security

Website
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52

Excel-Dashboard

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53

Recommender-engine

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54

youtube-replica

A YouTube Project Replica
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55

TV-Halftime-Shows-and-the-Big-Game

superbowl halftime shows and the big game analysis
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56

rock-paper-scissors

Rock, Paper, Scissors (aka "Ro-Sham-Bo"; janken; "Bato, Bato, Pick"; and "Scissors, Paper, Stone") is a simple hand game with many names and variations. It is played around the world and is commonly used as a way of coming to decisions. In some cases is even played for sport. The rules require that competing players use one hand to form one of three shapes at an agreed-upon time. The person that plays the strongest “object” is the winner of the game. It's that easy! Rock, Paper, Scissors is a simple game that anybody can play and win. There is no intrinsic advantage to the stronger, older, or more experienced opponent.
JavaScript
1
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57

landing-page

https://www.theodinproject.com/paths/foundations/courses/foundations/lessons/landing-page
HTML
1
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