Thank you for your interest in my course lectures on YouTube! I am very happy that you are enjoying them and hopeful that you have learned something valuable. I posted the lectures as publicly viewable so that people could watch and learn from them if they wish, but it was never intended to be a full course online with full access to all materials. This is simply a byproduct of having recorded the lectures for the courses at Memorial University. If you are reading this, it's probably because I've replied to an email you wrote me requesting individual help, or lecture materials such as assignments or solutions. Unfortunately I do not have time to help everyone who asks me with individual problems relating to the lecture materials. This is an unfortunate part of posting videos to YouTube - there are way more viewers than there are teachers, and I do not have the time to respond to all the questions or help requests. Even though people often have very good reasons for wanting to have access to the course assignments or solutions, they will never be released to anyone who is not a registered student of the course who is physically present at Memorial University. There are zero exceptions to this, no matter the reason. If the assignments were released to even a single person online, then the solutions could be posted, and the courses would be ruined. These take months to make, and it is simply infeasible to create new assignments each course offering. "But I would never do that, I promise" you say. Yes, you would probably not do that. But it only takes one person to ruin the fun for everyone, and I cannot possibly investigate and vet everyone who asks for the assignment materials. For this reason, even if you are a student at another university, professor, or someone offering me money, I cannot give you any additional files for the courses. Many people also email me asking for programming help, or to look at their code to see what is wrong with their implementation of the assignments from the youtube videos. At any given time I typically have between 60-200 students in my courses and I simply do not have time to help individuals who email me with their programming. I wish I could, but I cannot. If you want more C++ practice with SFML, or you want to make a bunch of simple games for practice, I recommend the following YouTube playlist, which is actually how I got introduced to SFML in the first place: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLB_ibvUSN7mzUffhiay5g5GUHyJRO4DYr I also recommend playing around with ChatGPT and getting it to help you making your own simple games with C++ and SFML, or any other programming language for that matter. It is quite good at producing template code for your games, and explaining basic concepts that you may not be familiar with. - Dave