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What is the best alternative to Khan Academy - HTML/JS: Making webpages interactive?
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Interactive Web Pages with JavaScript - Treehouse
All
4
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
1
Top
Con
Credit card required to sign up for the free trial
Treehouse offers a free 14-day trial, but requires a credit card to sign up.
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Pro
Variety of related courses offered
This course introduces interacting with the DOM specifically. However, Treehouse offers a variety of different courses on JavaScript, jQuery, the DOM and more.
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Pro
Challenges for keeping the user engaged
Treehouse provides coding challenges throughout the course. You code directly in their editor, and your code is checked to make sure it's correct.
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Pro
Build a project as you learn
This course takes you through DOM manipulation with JavaScript by building a to-do application.
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3
0
JavaScript & jQuery - Jon Duckett
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6
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
3
Top
Con
jQuery is a bit out of date as of 2018
Most of what jQuery did for the web can now be done with pure ES6.
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Pro
Easy to follow with well explained concepts
This book won't confuse you with jargon - Everything is introduced with a clear explanation.
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Con
Errors throughout the book
There are plenty of errors through the book including typos and errors in the code. Many of these errors are listed on their errata page.
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Pro
Excellent examples
The examples throughout this book are well explained and easy to follow. In order to complete the examples on your own, you must have a clear understanding of the material covered in that chapter. This is a great way for you to understand what you should go back and review before moving on.
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Con
Issues with binding/quality issues
Many people have noted that the physical quality of the book is quite poor, resulting in the binding falling apart.
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Pro
Visually appealing book
The content is laid out in a visually appealing way, while utilizing plenty of images to help the reader grasp the concepts being taught.
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11
2
Codecademy
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13
Experiences
Pros
6
Cons
6
Specs
Top
Con
Not the best structure for quick refreshers
The content of the lessons is aimed very much at people just starting to learn how to code. This is perfect for beginners but if you want to use Codecademy to refresh your knowledge the lessons are not designed to be quickly done.
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Pro
Interactivity
Right from the start, users write code. They start small in an environment that has constant feedback and gradually progress to more complex concepts. Users can see code results instantly, giving great feedback.
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Con
Lack of context
Codecademy is great for providing a hands-on approach, but there is a lack of context regarding how to start a project in real life. While users may learn how to code using Codecademy's interface, they may not have any idea how to code independently.
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Pro
Excellent progression
Codeacademy doesn't overwhelm beginners with information. It gives bite-sized information, the bare minimum needed to finish a task and get to the next one. As the course progresses, it slowly fills in background information.
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Con
Sticks to pretty basic
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Pro
Good editor
Codeacademy has a powerful, beginner-friendly integrated development environment (IDE) that can also be used outside of curriculum.
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Con
Deleted a lot of content
A lot of free content has been taken away, for example the PHP course was removed from the site.
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Pro
Bite-sized lessons
Each lesson in code-academy focuses on a single concept, and repetition is provided to drill the concept.
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Con
Buggy
Codecademy is known to have many bugs which interfere with the editor, resulting in error messages despite having the correct answer.
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Pro
Mostly free content & best progression series for beginners
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Con
Allows infinite loops to run
If you run an infinite loop, the browser freezes. Many other similar websites will give you an error, preventing the loop from running. Though not a bug, the lack of feature to stop infinite loops from running can be quite frustrating to beginners.
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Pro
Community forums
It has forums which can be used to discuss with other learners
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Specs
Languages:
HTML, CSS, JavaScript, jQuery, Ruby, Python
Features:
Code editor, forum, progress saver, written tutorials
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239
44
W3Schools
All
9
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
5
Top
Pro
Easy to learn
All the tutorials are written in a straightforward and easy to understand way.
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Con
Outdated practices / problem solutions
The practices that are shown to solve the problems at hand are rarely, if at all, updated. Usually, their tutorials and learning material is updated only after they see their profits drop.
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Pro
Built in editor
Almost every example has a "try it yourself" button which opens up an editor in a new tab. It allows you to play with the example code and see how it works.
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Con
Doesn't care about teaching right
There are multiple errors in the data they show. Although the solutions they show work, they will lead to unmaintainable code. That happens even when the maintainable code alternatives are as easy or accessible to new programmers as the alternatives.
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Pro
Well organized tutorials
All of the lessons are separated into their own pages, which makes it easy to learn about specific concepts.
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Con
Certifications not recognized
Many professionals in IT agree that w3s certifications are not recognized by them and are deemed useless. Good luck finding any respectable professional that accepts a w3s certification.
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Pro
Great source from Google search's perspective
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Con
It is for profit
What defines what goes is and what gets fixed on w3schools is what gives them profit and what doesn't (through their ads system).
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Con
Written tutorials only
While many learning resources offer a mixture of media in their courses (such as videos, challenges etc.), w3schools offers only written tutorials and code editors. This makes w3schools more beneficial as a quick reference rather than a primary learning resource.
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Experiences
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53
21
Safari
All
13
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
7
Specs
Top
Pro
Works elegantly in OSX
The rendering of the pages and the browser compatibility with OSX works smoothly, when compared to other browsers. Also you get very high battery life with Safari, when compared to Chrome.
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Con
OSX only
Apple dropped Windows support after Safari 5.
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Pro
Extremely fast
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Con
Does NOT block Ads
Doesn't block ads, unlike browsers like Brave and Vivaldi.
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Pro
Sleek design
– No distraction stuff like favicons in tabs, all that borders, bevels and embosses in panels like in other browsers, no ugly shaped tabs. – Neat adress bar. – Good looking start “show all tabs” screen.
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Con
Poor support for new web technologies
Safari usually takes its time when it comes to adopting new and useful web technologies meaning that the user gets an inferior experience compared to other modern browsers.
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Pro
iCloud syncing
Tabs, passwords, bookmarks and, history all sync across devices.
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Con
Proprietary
While Safari er is currently available gratis (without monetary charge) on Mac OS X, it is currently not libre (meaning that it does not allow users to view the source code used to create, to modify that code, or to redistribute modifications) and is therefore neither free nor open-source software.
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Pro
Safari uses Webkit, a great open source web engine
Webkit is very light compared to Blink, renders web pages at an incredible speed, great CSS support and is also constantly evolving.
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Con
Outdated Rendering engine
All other browsers and toolkits (Qt/GTK) have shifted to Googles Blink-fork of KHTML/Webkit so Apple is currently the only main contributor left.
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Con
Terrible support for open source formats like .VP9 or .ogg
Apple does not support open source formats. Instead, they use H.264 and H.265.
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Con
Even on OSX not the best Experience
Video controls are bad esp. on youtube. Only few browser extensions.
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Specs
Platforms:
macOS, iOS, iPadOS
License:
Proprietary
Based On:
N/A
Price:
Free
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