Angular Front To Back

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Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this online Udemy course.

Master Angular 5 from the basics to building an advanced application with Firebase's Firestore as well as authentication

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Taught by
Brad Traversy

Reddit Posts and Comments

0 posts • 5 mentions • top 4 shown below

r/Angular2 • comment
1 points • AndreThompson-Atlow

https://www.udemy.com/course/angular-4-front-to-back/

r/angular • comment
1 points • drjd2020

https://www.udemy.com/course/angular-4-front-to-back/

Little out of date, but well done and easy to follow.

r/angularjs • comment
1 points • davo-mx

Traversy Media looks like a great option for angular 2+ (as opposed to angular 1 aka angular js). You can take a look at his yt channel (angular related playlist link here) and if he meets your expectations, you can go and buy his Udemy course.

Good luck and happy coding!

r/computerscience • comment
1 points • HaltAlmighty

I have a friend that used to work as a lawyer but decided to transition to software development. He knew a bit of python and he used it to crunch data for cases he worked on. Well, he took advantage of his existing skills and invested some time proving them by taking data analytics courses on Udacity and Coursera. I also taught him the basics of web development, front-end and backend. This was enough for him to land the first job about 3 years ago. On that job he had to crunch data, build web APIs and build simple report pages. He worked pretty hard since then and now he's an awesome front end engineer.

My advice for you would be the same. Take advantage of what you know now and try to learn web development. If you can write backend code in python and you know angular or react, have a good grasp of the fundamentals of HTML, CSS and JavaScript, that'll be enough for you to get a job. Once you have a job you're going to learn a lot of the other important skills in practice and find what are you like to work on the most. Don't be super picky with your first job, go for it learn and move to a better one after when you feel you're not learning new things anymore.

If you have a friend who's a developer, ask them if they can mentor you. That gonna make your learning process much simpler. Otherwise try some udemy courses. There are really nice ones there.

This should get you up and running.

https://www.udemy.com/course/rest-api-flask-and-python/

https://www.udemy.com/course/the-web-developer-bootcamp/

https://www.udemy.com/course/the-advanced-web-developer-bootcamp/

https://www.udemy.com/course/angular-4-front-to-back/

It gonna be hard but if that's what you want, just go for it! Changing areas is a big challenge and I do respect who goes through that process. In my experience, people like you becomes great professionals.