I've been using SoloLearn for nearly 2 years, every single day, and it's almost replaced facebook for me. I mean, it's an awesome place, with awesome people. Great place to learn the basics of coding, and practice writing codes, and have a great time.
Open Yale Courses might be a bit more popular than SoloLearn. We know about 15 links to it since March 2021 and only 15 links to SoloLearn. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
You could stick with freeCodeCamp or use SoloLearn. It's a duolingo style app that teaches programming in small exercises instead of full projects. Source: 10 months ago
That being said, I wouldn't push it back that far. At best, push it back a month, and spend that month on sololearn.com focusing on the Java courses. If you know Java, you can learn Python on the fly. Then keep track of your intended schedule (once you've discussed the order you'll attempt classes with your Mentor; I've just copied your list verbatim) with due dates, as below. The Buffer weeks are there to... Source: 10 months ago
Watch this video by Game Maker's toolkit to understand Unity, after that, learn C# using SoloLearn, it's a Duolingo style (mobile/web)app that teaches programming languages. When you finish both, start doing your own projects and when you don't know something look for documentation, if you don't find any, then search on google, if you still don't find how to do what you want, then you ask on Reddit and StackOverflow. Source: 10 months ago
Additional Certifications never hurt. You could bang out the HTML, JavaScript, and CSS certs on sololearn.com in no time. I challenged my daughter to learn c# and I did it along with her ... 2 weeks and a few hours total later I had a new addition for my linkedin profile. Source: 11 months ago
Whatever you use, just stay far, far away from shady sites like https://sololearn.com. Source: 11 months ago
They’re from another decade now but the Yale Online Courses are really good https://oyc.yale.edu/. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago
2.) I’ve taken a few courses on Coursera, The Great Courses Plus (Now called Wondrium I believe- https://www.wondrium.com ), and the Free Yale courses available for free here: https://oyc.yale.edu. Source: about 1 year ago
You could get a degree, or you could just learn online tbh. I've heard people have been able to do that too, so long as you're passionate about it. There's plenty of free online college classes for coding like probably something in Yale or harvard. Source: about 1 year ago
Open courses on universities' websites, like https://oyc.yale.edu/. Source: about 1 year ago
It's not too late though, you can still go back to school and get a good education that will educate you and enlighten you to the error of your cognitive reasoning skills. In fact, you can even stay home and take free courses at Yale: https://oyc.yale.edu/. Source: over 1 year ago
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