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Programming, yeah.

 

Rendering and modeling, no. Like it will work, but it will struggle.

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CPU: R5 9600X || GPU: RX 9070 XT|| Memory: 32GB || Cooler: Peerless Assassin || PSU: RM850e|| Case: Lian Li A3

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1 minute ago, Gitesh said:

 Is ryzen 5 2400g non-oc good without external gpu for:-

coding stuff like arduino,python,c++,etc.

Also,

For 3d application like 3d modeling for stuffs like 3d printers,2d to 3d conversation,etc.

 

For coding, 4 cores, 8 threads is quite enough, though compiling if you do that, it won't be as happy but it'll still do it well.
For 3D aplications, such as rendering and CAD type programmes, afraid not really, it'll be slow and awful, and in some cases not supported *stares at solidworks*
An R5 1500 and medium end card, like a GTX 1050, would probably be better for that use. Nvidia usually do better for 3D stuff like modeling, though a Quadro is preferred for professional work. 

Yours faithfully

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2 minutes ago, Lord Nicoll said:

For coding, 4 cores, 8 threads is quite enough, though compiling if you do that, it won't be as happy but it'll still do it well.
For 3D aplications, such as rendering and CAD type programmes, afraid not really, it'll be slow and awful, and in some cases not supported *stares at solidworks*
An R5 1500 and medium end card, like a GTX 1050, would probably be better for that use. Nvidia usually do better for 3D stuff like modeling, though a Quadro is preferred for professional work. 

My original pc has 6c,12td and 1050ti but for my working desk is to far n some time i can use my second pc both as programing deviceand nas.

Its just my second pc for external oscilloscope(as electrical engineer),things to do for my ender-3 3dprinter,basic arduino/pi programing.

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depending on the applications you're going to use for your 3D work.. for as far as i can make out the majority of 3D-printer related applications are barely gpu accelerated, if at all.

and for example cura's slicer... is a single cpu core doing all the work.

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1 minute ago, Gitesh said:

My original pc has 6c,12td and 1050ti but for my working desk is to far n some time i can use my second pc both as programing deviceand nas.

Its just my second pc for external oscilloscope(as electrical engineer),things to do for my ender-3 3dprinter,basic arduino/pi programing.

For those exact tasks the 2200G would probably be enough, but depends on how cheap the 2400G is, splicing for a 3D printer I think is mosttly CPU bound, but I could be wrong, either way it should be enough if you wanna save some money. 

Yours faithfully

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4 minutes ago, Lord Nicoll said:

For those exact tasks the 2200G would probably be enough, but depends on how cheap the 2400G is, splicing for a 3D printer I think is mosttly CPU bound, but I could be wrong, either way it should be enough if you wanna save some money. 

How much ram should i need and do i need ssd ...i think hdd will do fine?

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