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Byox - Build Your Own X Learning programming by rebuilding technologies from scratch
learning
methodology
programming
open-source

Byox (Build Your Own X)

Definition

Byox (Build Your Own X) is a learning methodology that advocates for mastering programming and technology understanding by rebuilding complex systems from scratch. The guiding principle comes from physicist Richard Feynman:

"What I cannot create, I do not understand."

Core Philosophy

Instead of passively consuming knowledge about how a technology works, practitioners:

  1. Choose a technology they want to understand deeply
  2. Study existing implementations and documentation
  3. Rebuild it from scratch using a chosen programming language
  4. Gain deep insight into how it works internally

Coverage

The Byox methodology covers 26 technology domains:

  • Systems: Operating System, Docker, Container
  • Languages: Programming Language, Compiler, Interpreter, Regex Engine
  • Data: Database, NoSQL, Key-Value Store
  • Web: Web Browser, Web Server, Search Engine
  • Tools: Git, Shell, Command-Line Tool, Text Editor, Template Engine
  • Graphics: 3D Renderer, Voxel Engine, Physics Engine
  • AI/ML: Neural Network, Visual Recognition
  • Networks: Network Stack, BitTorrent Client
  • Entertainment: Game, Emulator/Virtual Machine
  • Other: Blockchain/Cryptocurrency, Augmented Reality, Bot

Resources

Primary resource: codecrafters-io/build-your-own-x — A curated collection of 500+ step-by-step tutorials

Complementary platform: CodeCrafters — Interactive challenges that guide learners through building technologies step by step

Notable Examples

Technology Language Resource
Database C Let's Build a Simple Database
OS Rust Writing an OS in Rust
Programming Language Multiple Crafting Interpreters
Web Browser Python Browser Engineering
Git Python Write yourself a Git
Docker Go Build Your Own Container

Why Byox Works

  1. Active Learning: Building forces deep engagement
  2. Hidden Complexity: Reveals implementation details textbooks skip
  3. Transferable Skills: Generalizes to understanding other systems
  4. Portfolio Building: Creates tangible proof of understanding
  5. Confidence: Only truly knowing something if you can create it