Learning web dev is hard, but taking the right approach can really help!

#css #shorts

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31 Comments

  1. I learned programming with trial and error. When I didn't know how to do something (or failed to do something), I would watch a tutorial on that specific thing until I understood it

  2. Odin project is perfect imo. I just started not too many videos mainly content to read and instructions to do things
    You’re forced to get to work and google solutions

  3. "Don't guide people wrong. This is not a mistake; it is a correct way to learn. I have learned full-stack web development just like that, and now I'm doing very well."

  4. It's similar in art too. When you build a higher sense of standard for art by examining other people's art instead of focusing on your own art skills.

  5. The thing is no course can describe all the necessary stuffs. You watch they do, you think it should work like you think, and reality punches in yo face to tell what you thought is not enough. They got over that barrier somehow and didn’t even know they did to tell you. And your job is to find a way to get over it.

  6. I almost fell into this rabbit hole. I got lucky in that my boss at the time asked me to make him a website and even though I barely knew html and css I got it done and have never gone back to do any tutorials. In my opinion the best way to learn is by trial and error 404

  7. That's why you don't buy or watch that kind of stuff, i buy udemy course or watch something that really guide us to make a real code step by step and teach us while we doing it, It's like a coach who trains us directly to practice while following next to us

  8. Which is why I find videos and follow along with the coding process for a project, even if I don’t understand. Then I rewatch it with the code in front of me to identify from their explanations what everything means. Then I do sections of it again from memory and fix the issues I inevitably create without the videos. People want to learn and be lazy at the same time. This only works if the subject doesn’t require practical application.

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