MongoDB - The Complete Developer's Guide 2022

share ›
‹ links

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

Master MongoDB Development for Web & Mobile Apps

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
Academind by Maximilian Schwarzmüller

1

Reddit Posts and Comments

0 posts • 8 mentions • top 6 shown below

r/mongodb • comment
1 points • leopoldkristjansson

https://www.udemy.com/course/mongodb-the-complete-developers-guide/

r/mongodb • comment
1 points • DataD23

If you’re looking for just a basic course To get up to speed with MongoDB, I personally really liked https://www.udemy.com/course/mongodb-the-complete-developers-guide/

But if you really want to go deep with it I’d recommend the MongoDB University Courses, The MongoDB Definitive Guide 3rd. Edition, and of course the online documentation that they have.

r/learnprogramming • comment
5 points • jpm8288

My answer is below, and here is the link to the original thread (https://www.reddit.com/r/learnprogramming/comments/npjy8e/how_long_did_it_take_you_to_complete_the_odin/)

Looking back, I would say that TOP was worth starting if you don't know if coding is for you. At the time, I was building a business, and wanted to code my own website. Now that I have been through the entirety of TOP, all the udemy courses, and built a number of websites, I would only recommend TOP as a way to see if you are interested in coding, and I would say to only do the fundamentals section.

I say this because the udemy courses by Maximilian Schwarzmüller are all complete guides. This means he shows you all the things you can do with CSS, Javascript, React, and MongoDB. He also explains the history of each language and why it was developed in a particular way. This won't seem so important as a beginner, but if you code on other people's projects that are older, you will understand what the past programmer was doing and be able to optimize what he or she was doing.

The biggest problems I think all beginner programmers have when learning on their own is knowing when you know enough, and if you are learning efficiently. Going through TOP, you think that they taught you everything or at least enough about a programming language, but I felt as if I had to keep looking up basic things. And in all honesty, their sections on React and MongoDB were terrible at the time I took the course, and they don't look that much better now that I took another look at the curriculum.

After completing the Udemy courses, and taking good notes, I found that I had a better grasp of the fundamentals and only needed to look up things that are complex problems. In most cases, I could always just reference my notes since it mirrored the complete guide. Also, another reason to do the complete guide is that you can't always program what is in your head if you don't know all the options in your language of choice. This, for me, was the single biggest reason why I recommend the complete guide udemy courses. The alternative is to spend a lot of time learning things in a piecemeal fashion which is very very inefficient because you might be learning to do something while skipping over some very fundamental coding knowledge.

Whether you plan to work for yourself, or find employment after studying, I would recommend you do the foundations course in TOP to find out if you are interested in coding. If you are interested, I would skip the rest of TOP and purchase the following MERN stack products from Maximilian Schwarzmüller once they are on sale for $15 - $20 on udemy:

https://www.udemy.com/course/css-the-complete-guide-incl-flexbox-grid-sass/

https://www.udemy.com/course/javascript-the-complete-guide-2020-beginner-advanced/

https://www.udemy.com/course/react-the-complete-guide-incl-redux/

https://www.udemy.com/course/mongodb-the-complete-developers-guide/

https://www.udemy.com/course/git-github-practical-guide/

The last thing I wanted to say is that I recommend the MERN stack, as opposed to learning RUBY in your case, is that the job market cares a lot more about the MERN stack and not so much about rails. Even if you were planning to strike out on your own I would recommend the MERN stack because there are so many other developers using it that any problem you will likely run into will have likely been answered somewhere in some fashion.

I hope I have given a sufficient answer to your question. I don't know if the free fullstack course covers everything, but I found it to be a major pain when there were gaps in my knowledge as a developer. If you follow the courses above, you won't have any fundamental knowledge gaps and will likely be ahead of other beginner developers.

Edit: if I didnt emphasize it enough, take VERY GOOD notes when taking these courses. I took notes based on every section of each video linked above because each video shows you something new. There is too much to memorize, and it can be a pain to look through past videos when all you need is a refresher from your notes. Trust me on this one.

Also, TOP and this video series will take equivalent amounts of time to complete and master, but this udemy series leaves you better prepared for interviews, real world work, and personal business projects.

r/ExperiencedDevs • comment
1 points • ReditGuyToo

First thing to know about UDemy is they often have great sales. If you look at the non-sale prices, those might scare you off. But with sales, I buy courses for like $10 to $20 each, which is really great when you consider I can always access them (or at least till UDemy goes down in flames) and many courses get updated over time.

I recently completed a JavaScript course. I really liked it because I feel the guy talks to me like I'm an idiot. In other words, I feel he knows me. Also, he covers a lot. He teaches you some NodeJS, MongoDB, some security. And across the whole course, you build a pretty cool Twitter-like website, but it's more simplistic:

https://www.udemy.com/course/learn-javascript-full-stack-from-scratch/

This is a Mongo DB course I'm taking now:

https://www.udemy.com/course/mongodb-the-complete-developers-guide/

I took a few other courses like CSS, Unit Testing, Bootstrap 4, but those for one reason or another I can't really recommend. The CSS didn't seem very complete, the Unit Testing seemed too short, and the Bootstrap 4 seemed like I was better off just going straight to the docs as that's what the guy does.

I think the final word here is just to search for a topic on UDemy and sort by most reviews. The top reviewed courses are usually high quality. Most courses even have a preview so you can check out the video quality. Besides these that I mentioned, I also got some AI courses and some "complete web developer" courses but I have yet to start those.

r/learnprogramming • comment
1 points • dreadwing55

Here is a curated list of all the best udemy course that I'm currently doing as a part of my full stack web development journey.

Basic Web Development :

1.Angela Yu Course - Must for beginners

2.Vanilla Javascript ( https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-javascript-course/ ) - Must for learning Javascript in depth

3.Colt Steele Course (New Stuffs + YelpCamp) (Do this course for more practice & new Stuffs)

Advance Frontend :

  1. Advance CSS ( https://www.udemy.com/course/advanced-css-and-sass/ )

  2. React (https://www.udemy.com/course/react-redux/)

Advance Backend :

  1. Node (https://www.udemy.com/course/nodejs-the-complete-guide/

Advance Database :

  1. MongoDB (https://www.udemy.com/course/mongodb-the-complete-developers-guide/)

  2. MySQL ( https://www.udemy.com/course/the-ultimate-mysql-bootcamp-go-from-sql-beginner-to-expert/ )

r/argentina • comment
1 points • gustavsen

vi el programa de la carrera.

muchas buzzword para resultar atractivo

el stack tecnologico que usan es raro cuanto menos tirando a atrasado.

si sos autodidacta tenes gratis: https://freecodecamp.org

que es un curso en etapas muy interesante, pronto va a sacar el de python para data science y ahi va a ser excelente.

de udemy te aconsejo:

  • https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-javascript-course/

  • https://www.udemy.com/course/nodejs-express-mongodb-bootcamp

tambien:

  • https://www.udemy.com/course/javascript-the-complete-guide-2020-beginner-advanced/

  • https://www.udemy.com/course/nodejs-the-complete-guide

  • https://www.udemy.com/course/mongodb-the-complete-developers-guide

y de extra:

  • https://www.udemy.com/course/react-nodejs-express-mongodb-the-mern-fullstack-guide

  • https://www.udemy.com/course/vuejs-2-the-complete-guide

con 77 usd como maximo (si compras los primeros 7 cursos entre 10 y 11usd) ^(6391ar$) tendrias muchisimo para aprender con lo que te costaria un solo mes del instituto que mencionaste...

tampoco te olvides del excelente link que esta en la sidebar:

exitos