The Complete Web Developer Course 2.0

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

Learn Web Development by building 25 websites and mobile apps using HTML, CSS, Javascript, PHP, Python, MySQL & more

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Taught by
Rob Percival

1

Reddit Posts and Comments

0 posts • 15 mentions • top 15 shown below

r/learnprogramming • comment
2 points • JustDagger

Hi, i'm trying to learn web development this year, but don't have a lot of knowledge of what i should learn an why.

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This course would help me with that?

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I have taken a Java course already, and finished it, but ended up not knowing where to go, how to interconect this lenguage whit others ot even what frameworks are, or for what they are used.

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Thanks, and sorry if i broke some rule with something.

r/web_design • comment
1 points • Askee123

There’s a “complete web developer” course on udemy that’s an excellent start imo

Look up the course name + coupon or wait for it to go on sale. Never buy udemy courses full price.

https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-web-developer-course-2/

r/HTML • comment
1 points • cdm98

Full web dev course on udemy for $20 - https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-web-developer-course-2/

r/webdev • comment
1 points • Ntheboss

Hey! Sorry I did not read rules of the subreddit before posting, my bad.

Well, I thought about picking a course for learning html+css+javascript and found this. This gives me good vibes, and most of my seniors are not into web development, so I have really lacking guidance about it. Can you have a look into this course if you can, and maybe let me know if I should grab it or not.

Also, how did you start out? How much progress did you make in your 1st, 6th, 12th months of web development learning.

Thanks in advance 😊

r/webdev • comment
1 points • DavidCetinkaya

I agree that this is a great course. It for me started with web development:

https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-web-developer-course-2

Maybe I would skip the jQuery part nowadays because its use is declining.

r/HTML • comment
1 points • Coderless

Get this Udemy course. It contains everything you need to known. Make sure you practise using w3schools and online free exercises, as well as freeCodeCamp.

r/learnprogramming • comment
1 points • setarp_88

Hi,

I personally recommend this one https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-web-developer-course-2/, did it a while ago and I think it contains great content. But if you want to go with one of the two you suggested my answer is both seem great, but dependents on what you want, if you want an introduction to web development without initial minding much about databases and specific frameworks the second link seems the ideal for you otherwise the first one is better because already gives you an introduction to frameworks like React and also NoSQL Db's like MongoDB. Have fun learning :)

r/ComputerEngineering • comment
1 points • MagicManYo

I recently bought this Udemy course for $16 but have barely gone through it. Thought it might interest you. https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-web-developer-course-2

I'm certain there are plenty of other resources, which could be potentially better, but this is what I know of.

r/PHP • comment
1 points • expirationdater

Of course!

It had the ability for people to log in/create accounts; a user control panel (change password, edit profile, edit forum signature, edit avatar, "shops" where you could buy items for virtual currency, dailies (like, click here, you might get a random prize, etc.), user shops where you could sell site items for virtual currency, forums, news posts, amongst other things, but those are the main things off the top of my head. It was a site for fans of a certain fandom. Think of maybe like a fandom-themed Neopets. :p

None of use are versed at all in PHP. I have found "PHP generators" online (from this list) but I'm not sure as to how good they are. I also purchased this course on Udemy, but it was quite a few years ago, and I know PHP has gone through some iterations since then and I don't know if what's in the course is still useful. Any pointers would be lovely.

r/gis • comment
1 points • mcnoob-let

https://www.freecodecamp.org/ is great. I definitely recommend any material through them even if it's just to test your knowledge.

I first learned python through codeacademy, but that was before they implemented premium content, so I had all of their resources at my disposal at the time. I've since tried some continuing education on other languages through them and have been disappointed at how little is available for free now.

As for web dev, after I did a couple lessons through codeacademy and knew I was in for the long haul, I paid $10 for Rob Percival's course. I did really well learning through that because he gets increasingly complex and works you through some real-world examples that I found myself returning to while developing my own content. I know that Colt Steele is also popular, but I never tried his stuff.

r/phinvest • comment
1 points • technicaldebt23

Yes naman pero mag sstart ka ulit sa starting salary na 15k to 25k. May mga technical lead and ka work akong hindi naman IT like business ad, nursing, and engineering course na developer din. Wala daw sila mahanap na work nung fresh grad sila kaya nag start sila mag aral ng android or web development tapos nag apply kung saan saan.

syempre mag aaral ng matindi nun para makapasa ka sa mga exam and interview.

Take mo yung web development. madaming web development bootcamp course sa Udemy. https://www.udemy.com/course/the-web-developer-bootcamp/ eto muna tapos https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-web-developer-course-2/

pwede mo din araling yung Node.js course sa taas pero after na nung web developer bootcamp. ;)

r/learnprogramming • comment
2 points • Riou_Atreides

Aaah fuck, if only your comment was on Cyber Week, I would've saved a lot of money. I'd spent upwards of 80.87 United States Dollar for like 10~ courses and 4 of them are for Full-Stack Web Development (The Web Developer Bootcamp by Colt Steele, The Complete Web Developer in 2020: Zero to Mastery by Andrei Neagoie,The Complete 2020 Web Development Bootcamp by Angela Yu,The Complete Web Developer Course 2.0 by Rob Percival, Codestars by Rob Percival) because despite going through a Full-Stack Web Development program, I feel my front-end is kinda shitty.

At least I bought some which are specific for JavaScript since the bootcamp I go through just teaches the surface level and these courses would help me supplement my understanding for JavaScript (The New Modern Javascript Bootcamp (2020) by Colt Steele, Stephen Grider, The Complete JavaScript Course 2020: Build Real Projects! by Jonas Schmedtmann, The Modern JavaScript Bootcamp by Andrew Mead, The Complete React Developer Course (w/ Hooks and Redux) by Andrew Mead, The Complete Node.js Developer Course (3rd Edition) by Andrew Mead).

r/AskWomen • comment
1 points • T-Flexercise

My favorite thing about computer science is that the kinds of things that you do as a professional are basically the same as the things you do as a beginner. They're just more complex and build on those basics. So if you want to find out if you would like coding and want to dedicate yourself to it more, the best thing to do is to find any kind of basic training course in the specific thing you're interested in, follow it all the way through, and see if you like it. Then, try to make something in that area. As you're trying to make your own thing that you're interested in, there will be questions that you don't know the answer to, and you can take additional courses to answer those questions.

My favorite place to learn the specific answers to questions is stack overflow and the documentation for the programming language I'm writing in. They'll have the most detail.

But my favorite place to learn a new skill in software is Udemy. The courses are like $12 each, and if you pick one that's popular, they're usually really good. They're almost all project based, so instead of spending hours trying to teach you all the basics before you put it together, they walk you through a project from beginning to end, so you learn how to structure a project overall and how the pieces fit together, and you have context not just for how to write a Singleton, for example, but for why you'd want to use a Singleton.

Since you mention wanting to get into data analysis, if you are already confident in math in general, I'd highly recommend this Machine Learning course https://www.udemy.com/course/machinelearning/

If you want more a friendly approach to see if you like writing software, I'd recommend either this course for Web Development: https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-web-developer-course-2/

Or this course if you're more interested in making video games: https://www.udemy.com/course/unitycourse/

Both are very project based, interesting, and easy to understand and apply what you've learned to your own projects.

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But super duper important, if you're going to use Udemy, they go on sale all the goddamn time. All the courses say "This is $100". They don't cost $100. Wait for a sale or find a coupon code, you'll get it for under $20.

r/webdev • comment
1 points • ywiley

some udemy courses that helped learn some javascript and web development and the fundamentals around it

(https://www.udemy.com/course/thecompletewebdeveloper/)

(https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-web-developer-course-2/)

(https://www.udemy.com/course/programming-in-javascript/)

Also check out (https://www.freecodecamp.org/) i went through their front end development curriculum and finished my front end certificate.

Also (https://www.theodinproject.com/) helped me a lot to with taking up javascript and programming. Hope this helps in some kind of way!

Happy Coding!