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I think I am good at programming, so will call myself computer engineer in the sense that to solve a problem I do find good solutions but I wouldn't say I have deep knowledge of computer science as such, which I do want to learn, but I do not want to buy any book a) they are heavy b) they are costly

So what online resources you think I should read and things I should do to become a better computer scientist?

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You are misusing the term computer engineer. In the simplest terms, computer engineering refers to designing computers and software engineering refers to programming them. – Jeanne Pindar Oct 3 at 20:46
ok noted, but extending that logic shouldn't it be software scientist :) – Anonymous Oct 21 at 3:25

7 Answers

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Just take a topic and google it...you will find millions of blogs and articles on that particular topic and even at times e books.

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As others have already indicated, MIT OpenCourseware is a valuable resource.

Here are some additional links to online CS courseware:

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As a Python fan I recomend you: Think Python, How to Think Like a Computer Scientist

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If you want to be a computer scientist, step away from the computer and grab a pencil and paper.

Computer science is a branch of mathematics.

You can find books or online articles, but they'll not seem cohesive.

If you want to get a sense, start with wikipedia, and start skipping to the footnotes and reading the original papers, etc.

90% of the time, people who have a passion for programming find that they have very little interest in doing actual computer science.

If you're in that 10%, you should consider doing it right, and getting yourself into a good university (not a trade school!)

The MIT Opencourseware stuff is pretty cool, as others just mentioned.

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MIT OpenCourseware has quite a few good teach-yourself courses for free. I blogged about Algorithms resources recently.

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+1 I was going to suggest this site myself but you posted it first – APC Sep 17 at 5:38
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MIT Courseware (sorry for lack of link, but I'm sure 10 seconds of Googling will find that for you :)

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Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs

To Dissect a Mockingbird

Algorithms (S. Dasgupta, C.H. Papadimitriou, and U.V. Vazirani)

Exotic Data Structures - mostly persistent (immutable w/ efficient sharing in functional programming)

Okmij (a mixed bag of advanced topics)

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I'm not convinced that the "To Dissect a Mockingbird" link is that useful. – Mitch Wheat Sep 17 at 5:38
"To Dissect a Mockingbird" looks good read at first glance – Anonymous Sep 17 at 6:01

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