Computer Science
programming, debugging, data structures, algorithms, discrete math, projects, and technical coursework
View computer science tutoringComputer Science / Data Science / Statistics
Daniel works with students who are stuck on programming assignments, data structures, debugging, or data projects. He focuses on helping students explain their code and understand why a solution works.
4.8 / 5 average rating from 31 reviews.
Tutoring style: Debugging-focused and concept-driven, with an emphasis on students writing their own code confidently.
Courses: Intro Programming, Data Structures, Algorithms, Python for Data Science
programming, debugging, data structures, algorithms, discrete math, projects, and technical coursework
View computer science tutoringPython, R, statistics, machine learning basics, data cleaning, visualization, and analytics projects
View data science tutoringprobability, hypothesis testing, confidence intervals, regression, data analysis, and statistical software
View statistics tutoringSee subject-specific tutoring options for Columbia University students.
Columbia computer science tutorsSee subject-specific tutoring options for Columbia University students.
Columbia data science tutorsSee subject-specific tutoring options for Columbia University students.
Columbia statistics tutorsSee subject-specific tutoring options for New York University students.
NYU computer science tutorsSee subject-specific tutoring options for New York University students.
NYU data science tutorsSee subject-specific tutoring options for New York University students.
NYU statistics tutors5 / 5
Daniel helped me debug without taking over the assignment. I finally understood the recursion problem.
5 / 5
Great at explaining Python errors and how to interpret the output from my model.
Daniel commonly supports Python, Java, JavaScript, and course-specific pseudocode.
Yes. He helps with arrays, linked lists, trees, recursion, graphs, runtime, and algorithms.
No. Sessions focus on understanding, debugging, and helping students write their own code.