Ollama
LM Studio
LangChain
Hugging Face
Jan.ai
GPT4All
Claude AI
OpenAI
Codédex
Scrimba
GoIT LMS
Codelita
Data Protocol
CodeCrafters
codedamn
Metaschool
Ollama
CodédexOllama is recommended for businesses and teams seeking an efficient project management solution. It is especially useful for remote teams, startups, and any organization looking to enhance collaboration and project tracking capabilities.
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Based on our record, Ollama seems to be a lot more popular than Codédex. While we know about 282 links to Ollama, we've tracked only 5 mentions of Codédex. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Agentic coding runs through Aider, configured to talk to local Ollama models by default and fall back to the free tiers on Groq and OpenRouter when a task wants more horsepower. Same agent, same workflow, whether it's fully offline or tapping a free hosted model. - Source: dev.to / about 11 hours ago
To see available tags for any model, check the model page on ollama.com or run ollama show llama3 --modelfile to inspect what you currently have. - Source: dev.to / 6 days ago
Ollama lets you run open source models locally. After installing it, you have a server running at http://localhost:11434. - Source: dev.to / 14 days ago
It began as a small experiment on my base Mac mini. I pulled Qwen through Ollama just to see how capable the model would be running directly on a local machine. The results were far better than I expected. Good enough that I stopped thinking of it as a toy and started thinking about production. - Source: dev.to / 15 days ago
Try out this sample that embeds and loads data into the emulator. It uses LangChain, a popular open-source framework for building AI applications, and Ollama, a tool for running open-source models locally. - Source: dev.to / 19 days ago
I'm a new coder too. What helps me is finding a good place to learn the most basic principles and having 2-5 things I want to do. I started with codedex.io , learning Python and HTML and then took their courses and moved on looking for projects with tutorials. Little steps one by one. The rest is practice breaking things down into tiny steps. Source: over 3 years ago
I think you should focus on HTML, CSS, and JS, starting with HTML. I just started HTML on a website called codedex.io. Pretty cool so far but I feel like I'm getting into a brand new thing haha. Source: over 3 years ago
I've been learning Python on a website called codedex.io for about 6 months. It's been great for me so far. I just started on Classes and Objects. Give them a try, you might like them. Source: over 3 years ago
Python is a great language to start as a beginner! I don't know how new you are but a good place to learn some basics is codedex.io (also where I started from zero, 6 months ago haha). Source: over 3 years ago
You should start from the basics with a platform like codedex.io they do Python! It was straightforward to use for me (I'm 32). Give them a try. I am still a beginner, but I was starting from zero. Source: over 3 years ago
LM Studio - Discover, download, and run local LLMs
Scrimba - Interactive coding screencasts created in an instant
LangChain - Framework for building applications with LLMs through composability
GoIT LMS - Empowering emerging markets with high-quality tech education
Hugging Face - The AI community building the future. The platform where the machine learning community collaborates on models, datasets, and applications.
Codelita - Anyone Can Code