Master Laravel 8 for Beginners & Intermediate
Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this online Udemy course.
Get from zero to proficiency in the Laravel Framework
Reddemy may receive an affiliate commission if you enroll in a paid course after using these buttons to visit Udemy. Thank you for using these buttons to support Reddemy.
Taught by
Piotr Jura | 27,000+ Enrollments
Reddit Posts and Comments
0 posts • 3 mentions • top 3 shown below
1 points • radu_c1987
You can take a look at Piotr Jura's Laravel course I bought it, but haven't started it so I can't tell too much about his teaching style. But it has 4.6 stars and I guess it can't be bad. It also lasts for 33 hours, you will build a blog CMS and learn a lot about Laravel. After finishing the course, you can start working on some project-based courses on Laracasts and Codecourse. Which will help you further improve your skills and general programming knowledge.
5 points • dharg
Laracasts is great for Laravel development and contains many resources for web dev.
https://laracasts.com/series/laravel-8-from-scratch
A decent udemy course I've done as well is https://www.udemy.com/course/laravel-beginner-fundamentals/
Laravel Daily: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTuplgOBi6tJIlesIboymGA and https://laraveldaily.com/ is great for improving your code and learning new methods.
You also have the Laravel Subreddit, https://old.reddit.com/r/laravel/
1 points • gerardw85
I'm currently doing this one and found it to be quite good, https://www.udemy.com/course/laravel-beginner-fundamentals/. For context, I'm not a web developer - and spend a good amount of time watching/re-watching some the videos to get past the learning curve. There's some lessons where you'll run into issues and need to troubleshoot (even if you followed the instructions precisely) - either by checking the video's Q&A or searching SO/Laracasts/Google. But, I figured may as well get used to having to do that - so don't see it as a negative.