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I just wanted to know if anybody took both or the react-tutorial.app course. I mostly like the flashcards part of the course. I was thinking of taking the Scrimba course and just using the other courses study materials. Source: 9 months ago
The Jad Joubran courses on the other hand really upped my skill level and helped me make the jump from passive learning, exercises and very small projects to making legitimate web apps. That was probably the biggest/scariest jump I've made in my learning journey, and without those courses and the hands-on skill checks and projects he makes you do, I wouldn't have gotten to where I am (which is close to finishing... Source: 11 months ago
I learned through https://react-tutorial.app/ and absolutely loved it. I'm also a hands-on guy. Source: 11 months ago
Try this and see if this learning method works for you (first 70ish lessons are free): https://react-tutorial.app. Source: 12 months ago
React-tutorial.app is a great step by step one, although you do have to pay for it. If you're comfortable learning things based off documentation that should work as well. Source: about 1 year ago
I want to use this as a chance to bring attention to a GitHub issue that I think would help reduce friction for Neon: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/4989. Having run a local dev environment connected to Neon and tests connected to Neon got in our way of adoption. We'd prefer to develop and run tests against a regular Postgres localhost database. To the PMs of Neon, put yourself in the shoes of a new... - Source: Hacker News / about 1 month ago
I'd push you to consider using postgres, slonik or similar for database queries. With these libraries, you just write SQL, but they perform input sanitization for you. So you can safely write:. Source: 5 months ago
There's also https://kysely.dev/ but personally I handwrite my queries with https://github.com/porsager/postgres for flexibility and performance most orms use node-pg lib which has shit performance. - Source: Hacker News / 7 months ago
When viewed as a DSL for set theory, views, CTEs, set-returning functions, et al are indeed proper first-class query abstractions. When viewed through the lens of general purpose imperative or functional programming languages, it's easy to see how it can be seen as falling short. I'll admit much of the tooling and driver APIs leave a lot to be desired. Some tools do make good efforts though such as nested... - Source: Hacker News / 8 months ago
Demonstrate how easily and accidentally one can make an SQL injection with these: https://github.com/porsager/postgres. - Source: Hacker News / 11 months ago
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