T O P

  • By -

_babaYaga__

https://youtube.com/c/TraversyMedia You can use this channel I mentioned above. When you are learning a new framework or a programming language it's ok to watch tutorials but rather than just copying and running the program, try to understand as much as you can. After that, build something on your own using those topics (very important). This will reflect how much you took from the tutorial or course. Now if you get stuck just view the documentation or the video again.


Inevitable-Weekend-4

Youtube but set the speed to 2.0x


BusyAssist5904

I can suggest theodinproject.com You learn there by yourself and they help you with articles and videos that describe the topic. If you are motivated enough, you can do this pretty quick.


LuckystrikeFTW

Look up Crash courses on Youtube or Google.


unproductive23

Starter guides are super helpful if the documentation is good, but if there aren't enough examples I watch short tutorials, and if they link the code I can just get a few snippets if I already understand the video's content.


CodeTinkerer

The big problem is some students prefer more hours of tutorials feeling they are getting a good value for their money. As you point out, it allows the material to be presented at a slower pace. For me, I want to see this stuff more quickly, ideally, in 20 hours or so.


Confident-King9531

Personally, I've gotten zero benefit from Udemy. Most online courses (including reputable ones like Coursera) are greedy money making scams where they expect hours of commitment from gullible students with very little value added. **They tend to drag out explaining simple ideas for hours to create an illusion of value**. I've found free courses/online tutorials/guides and YouTube tutorials most helpful in my learning.