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4.7 star rating
0
What is the best alternative to Lynda?
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Udemy
All
12
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
Wide range of courses
If one course doesn't meet your needs, there is a sea of other courses to choose from.
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Top
Con
Quality varies
The quality control for the content offered is fairly limited. As there are so many different instructors offering courses on Udemy, many of which lack formal training and teaching experience since anyone can be a teacher on Udemy, the quality varies quite a bit between the different courses.
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Top
Pro
Value for money
A +10 hour high quality course for under $20 is great value.
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Top
Con
Most courses are expensive
While Udemy does offer free courses, most of them are around $100.
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Top
Pro
Regular discounts
Often run discounts 50 - 90% off resulting in sub $20 courses.
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Top
Con
Difficult to take multiple (10+) courses at the same time
The system becomes messy and hard to follow if you plan on using the site to learn more than a handful of things at once.
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Top
Pro
Offers intermediate and advanced courses
Udemy offers plenty of courses for beginner programmers, but also has a large variety of more advanced courses to choose from.
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Top
Pro
Some courses are free
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Top
Pro
Courses available in over 80 languages
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Top
Pro
Friendly community
Both on site and on various social networks Udemy aims to create a community of friendly people that can help each other out.
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Top
Pro
Quality of top courses
The quality of top courses (+4.0 rating & high enrollment) is exceptional.
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Specs
Features:
Progress saver / video tutorials
Hide
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Experiences
Get it
here
102
14
Hackr.io
All
3
Experiences
Pros
3
Top
Pro
Community trust
Instead of getting a recommendation from a single dev, you get recommendation from the entire programming community.
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Top
Pro
Recommendation for every programming language/framework/library
You can find Python as well as Jenkins.
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Top
Pro
Nice filters
Free, Video, Book, Beginner, Advanced, etc.
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Hide
0
45
0
Treehouse
All
23
Experiences
Pros
14
Cons
8
Specs
Top
Pro
Great instructors
The course formats are flexible enough that instructors are able to employ their own styles so long as exercises are offered in consistent intervals and student progress is measurable. The instructors communicate very clearly and are very approachable.
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Top
Con
Regular participation is essential
This is not a good place to skip ahead and work backwards from a specific need. In fact, even skipping sections you have mastery in can be risky since the condensed material relies heavily on past examples.
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Top
Pro
Great material presentation, instruction, and visualization
Their animations and screenshares supplement the instruction, giving a really good all-around learning experience.
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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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Top
Pro
Best beginner's option
Materials are very well made and it'll get you started with the technology as fast as possible. Haven't found tutorials that well made and understandable. Nothing is skipped or assumed without reference to courses within that were recommended to you earlier. This makes the site an efficient review resource if you ever forget a basic concept.
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Top
Con
The quality is inconsistent among courses
Treehouse has multiple teachers in order to provide such a variety of content. However there is a lack of consistency with teaching styles - Some courses provide content that is well explained and goes at a reasonable pace. Other courses can be quite hard to follow. The challenges are also inconsistent - Some are too easy and don't reinforce much of the material learned.
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Top
Pro
Project-based learning
Soup to Bits videos show you how to build an app step by step in real time. Each is short and digestible yet illustrates many relevant new concepts.
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Top
Con
Way too expensive compared with other options
Most advanced materials are locked away as "Pro/Bonus."
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Top
Pro
Learning tracks
Trying to figure out what language or tool to learn can be frustrating. TreeHouse groups their courses into learning tracks so you have more guidance, based on what type of development you want to do. Some of the tracks they offer: Web Design, Front-end Development, Full-Stack Javascript, and PHP Development (see the list here).
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Top
Con
Charges your credit card before the free trial expires
The Treehouse offers a free trial period, which is nice on the one hand. On the other hand you still need to register a payment method to be able to use it. And what's even worse, if you cancel the paid subscription before the FREE trial ends, you loose any access to free trial! So you will then have to pay a subscription fee to renew the access to the free course even though you SHOULD have some trial period left. That is absolutely unacceptable these days and smells as quite a shady business practice.
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Top
Pro
Workspaces
You don't have to install anything to your computer and can learn from anywhere using their Workspaces. The effectiveness of this tool cannot be overstated. Even though instructors often preface courses with installation guides to setup popular environments the Workspaces allow you to jump right in, mimic the examples, work on your project, experiment with tangent thoughts, or even complete parallel courses simultaneously, within separate Workspace instances. Execution is very fast and space is ample.
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Top
Con
Has become very buggy/unreliable
The number of bugs has gradually been increasing to the point where the platform may be more frustrating than beneficial for some users (as of October 2016). The engineers seem to be doing their best to stay on top of things, but bugs appear to be occurring faster than they can fix them. Some bugs require you to refresh the page (often multiple times) before getting the information correctly displayed. UI elements jump around, some features on the site are broken.
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Top
Pro
Build projects as you learn
Most TreeHouse courses allow you to build interesting real-world projects that make for a fun way to learn how to apply what you've learned (such as apps, websites, UI elements and more).
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Top
Con
The forum lacks conversation/engagement
TreeHouse provides a a forum for students to have discussions. However almost all posts are students looking for answers to the quizzes and challenges. Any attempts at general discussions about business, learning, programming, job seeking etc. tend to go without replies.
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Top
Pro
New material added freqently
TreeHouse releases multiple new courses every month on various different topics. They do an excellent job of keeping pace with a changing industry. For example, they released courses on Swift not long after Swift was released.
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Top
Con
Not an in-depth resource
Most Treehouse courses are geared towards beginners, making it necessary to use other resources in order to gain a deeper understanding of the language you're learning.
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Top
Pro
Forum
If you're stuck with an task you can easily get help on their forum. Most topics are visited by hundreds of students per day and responses are often returned within minutes if not seconds. In case your question cannot be answered by the imminent community, they can be pushed to recommended members or staff experts for prompt responses.
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Top
Pro
Very Effective Resource
Criticizing the lack of advanced material seems unjustified considering how consistent the paths are with the costs and transparent intentions. Advanced resources are usually politely introduced then passed over.
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Top
Pro
iOS and Android app
Treeehouse provides an app for both iOS and Android that is easy to use.
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Top
Pro
Portfolio
You can share courses that you successfully completed when you're applying for a job. Probably after completing course you have a solid understanding in given technology.
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Top
Pro
Motivates Students
The community is very supportive and the company convincingly more interested in your positive referral than in your subscription, though both is obviously preferred. Besides recognition and gamification, your timely progress is actively encouraged. There are even employer monitored sections with suggestions of how to meet career goals with related skills.
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Top
Pro
Student discount
You can get a student discount easily using their email support.
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Specs
Languages:
HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Ruby, Python, PHP, Objective-C, Java, Swift
Features:
Projects, quizes, video tutorials, editor, progress saver, forum
Hide
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Experiences
$25
72
19
freeCodeCamp
All
16
Experiences
Pros
9
Cons
6
Specs
Top
Pro
Completely free
Free for anyone who wants to take the camp.
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Top
Con
No longer offers opportunity to build projects one-on-one with nonprofits
There are no nonprofits to help upon completing the program.
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Top
Pro
Open source
Due to freeCodeCamp being open source, you are able to contribute to the program that helped teach you how to code in the first place. It's a great way to give back and gain experience.
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Top
Con
Learning material is not in-depth
The teaching content provided by freeCodeCamp tends to act more as an introduction than a solid learning resource. Unless you already have some prior experience, you won't have enough knowledge to get through the coding challenges and development projects without using outside learning resources to fill in the gaps.
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Top
Pro
Self-paced
There is no set schedule with freeCodeCamp. You can work through the program as fast or as slow as you want.
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Top
Con
Massive time waste
Content mainly focuses on trivial concepts and is very sparse in those few areas that inch beyond 'complete beginner'.
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Top
Pro
Browser-based
All courses used by freeCodeCamp are done in the browser, rather than students having to set up their own environment. This makes it much easier for beginners to get started.
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Top
Con
Is an email list generator
Early focus isn't on programming. It is on signing up for all of FreeCodeCamp's social media and getting looped into their newsletters. The content is trivial. It is all just a massive marketing scheme to get email addresses of aspiring programmers to affiliate sell to by pushing novice developers to blog posts containing affiliate links. That is until they sell to a 3rd party. Read their disclaimer. Whoever buys them out gets all their user data, email lists, etc.
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Top
Pro
Actively developed
They are frequently updating courses and adding new material.
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Top
Con
No offline version
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Top
Pro
Welcoming, active community
freeCodeCamp strongly encourages interacting with other learners and experienced programmers. They provide chatrooms which are always active and full of members happy to answer any questions you may have. Pair programming (programming with another user) is encouraged as a great way to work through some of their coding challenges. There are also meetup groups where you can code in person with other freeCodeCamp students.
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Top
Con
Excessive focus on the basics
This platform focuses too much on the basics.
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Top
Pro
Six certificates available
There are currently six certificates available that you can get once you've completed all the projects: Responsive Web Design Certification Javascript Algorithms And Data Structures Certification Front End Libraries Certification Data Visualization Certification Apis And Microservices Certification Information Security And Quality Assurance Certification
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Top
Pro
Gain real world experience while helping nonprofits
Once you've completed all the courses and practice levels on freeCodeCamp, you are able to participate with other learners on developing software for non-profits. It's an amazing way to gain experience and build your portfolio as a developer, while helping out a non-profit organization.
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Top
Pro
Full stack certificate
There is a cool Full stack certificate
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Specs
Languages:
HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Python
Features:
Projects, chat, exercises, written tutorials, video tutorials, progress saver
Hide
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Experiences
Free
317
28
Codecademy
All
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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Top
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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Top
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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Top
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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Top
Con
Sticks to pretty basic
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Top
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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Top
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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Top
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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Top
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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Top
Pro
Mostly free content & best progression series for beginners
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Top
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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Top
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
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
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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Top
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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Top
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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Top
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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Top
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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Top
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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Top
Pro
Great source from Google search's perspective
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Top
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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Top
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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Hide
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Experiences
Get it
here
53
21
PluralSight
All
14
Experiences
Pros
10
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
Offers advanced content
PluralSight offers programming courses for intermediate and advanced students, providing more depth than many of it's competitors.
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Top
Con
Some courses are outdated
Some of the courses are years old, so they are fairly outdated.
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Top
Pro
Offers learning paths
PluralSite offers learning paths, which help you figure out which courses to take and in what order.
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Top
Con
No coding exercices
There is no space where you can test your learned skills.
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Top
Pro
Mobile apps available
Available iPhone and Android apps.
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Top
Con
Paid
Not Free
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Top
Pro
Consistent quality
The course quality is high because Pluralsight has a full-time editing staff that carefully reviews every video produced. They enforce audio, video and content standards that help ensure a consistent and high quality result.
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Top
Pro
You can check your skill in learned language
You get rating for each tested language. This rating is compared to the other users of pluralsight.
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Top
Pro
Huge breadth of content (over 4000 courses)
Courses on software development, design, 3D modeling, and much more.
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Top
Pro
Notes in courses
You can add notes to each course, which makes it easier to repeat what you learned in past.
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Top
Pro
New material added frequently
PluralSight is constantly adding new courses to reflect the evolving industry. Currently they offer over 4000 courses.
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Top
Pro
Assessments and certificates of achievement
Plural site offers both pre-course and post-course assessments. Passing post-assessments will allow you to view and print off a certificate of achievement.
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Top
Pro
Public profile statistics page
You can share your learning progress and interests. Useful to attach to a links section in resume.
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Specs
Features:
Video tutorials, written tutorials, progress saver, projects
Hide
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Experiences
Get it
here
95
14
Khan Academy
All
5
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Free
Khan Academy is 100% free and does not require you to sign up in order to access the courses.
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Top
Con
Limited programming courses
The programming courses are not in-depth, giving students only a basic knowledge of programming. The language choices are also limited (HTML, CSS and JavaScript).
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Top
Pro
Motivation through gamification
Users collect badges and points through completing missions, watching videos, adding comments and more.
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Top
Pro
Q & A Section
There is a Q & A section after every video where you can ask questions there and let other users answer them.
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Specs
Languages:
HTML, CSS, JavaScript
Features:
Editor, progress saver, video tutorials, written tutorials
Hide
Get it
here
73
7
Code School
All
11
Experiences
Pros
6
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Practice the code after each video
After each video, there are a series of challenges that give you a chance to apply what you just learned. The great thing about these challenges are that they force you to think through a problem, and use the new skills to solve it. It's not just regurgitating facts; it requires some effort.
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Top
Con
Acquired by Pluralsight
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Top
Pro
Paths for learning different skills
While you can jump into any video you like, there is also the option to follow a path for what you are wanting to learn. These give a nice direction if you are wanting to improve on a particular area and guide you into what to do next. They currently offer Ruby, Javascript, HTML/CSS, and iOS.
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Top
Con
Videos are of a tone that some people cannot stand
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Top
Pro
Videos show how to build an app in real time
Soup to Bits is a series of videos that shows a developer creating an app from scratch in real time. It's easy to pause a video and follow along with the developer.
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Top
Con
Requires paying to complete courses
Although the beginning of each course is free and you can see if you are interested in pursuing it, to complete the course you must pay.
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Top
Pro
Video tutorials
Videos give an overview of the course/lesson plan before a single line of code is written. This gives context and a general understanding of what is possible and how teaching will be approached.
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Top
Con
A bit too basic
There is not a lot of advanced content.
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Top
Pro
Fun and engaging teaching style
The instructors often use humour throughout the videos while letting their passion for the topic show.
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Top
Pro
In-depth courses
Code School is not just for beginners to programming, but provides plenty of intermediate and advanced courses for students as their skills grow.
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Specs
Languages:
C#, HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Ruby, SQL, Objective-C
Features:
Editor, video tutorials, progress saver, forum
Hide
See All
Experiences
Paid
75
12
Udacity
All
9
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Courses taught by industry professionals
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Top
Con
Nanodegrees are expensive
Udacity is quite expensive at $200/month if you want to do a nanodegree.
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Top
Pro
All courses are self-paced
Courses are always made available which means there is no waiting for the specific course you want to run. You can work through the courses as fast or as slow as you want.
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Top
Pro
Offers Nanodegrees
Udacity offers a few different Nanodegrees which provide access to various different courses, project reviews and coaching support for $200/month. Current options include Front End Web Developer, Data Analyst and Android Developer. See the full list here.
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Top
Pro
Courses are easy to understand
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Top
Pro
Actual feedback on coding projects
You get actual feedback from developers on your code, which is useful. Yes having your sites/apps do what it is supposed to do is important, but you need feedback to learn industry standards/best practices and other gotchas that are much harder to learn on your own.
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Top
Pro
Language that is easy to understand
Courses are super easy to follow, even for super dummies.
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Top
Pro
Worth the investment
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Specs
Languages:
HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Java, Python, Swift, SQL, R
Features:
Editor, progress saver, forum, video tutorials
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
103
13
The New Boston video series
All
5
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Everything is free
The tutorials are completely free.
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Top
Con
Somewhat outdated
These videos are a few years old (2011), so there is some content that is a bit outdated.
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Top
Pro
Video tutorials
Tutorials are presented as videos, making them easy to follow / see what's going on at each step. Many people find this format less daunting and easier to take in than traditional text based tutorials.
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Top
Pro
Suitable for beginners
No assumptions are made about prior knowledge, meaning anyone can start watching and pick up the basics fairly quickly.
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Top
Pro
More than 200 video lessons
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Hide
Get it
here
11
0
The Odin Project
All
4
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Build a portfolio as your learn
The Odin Project is a project-based curriculum which means you are able to build projects for your portfolio as you work through the sections.
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Top
Con
Light on CS
The Odin Project touches on computer science concepts, such as data structures. However the explanations are quite light and something you'll want to learn more about from other resources.
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Top
Pro
Free and open source
The Odin Project is a completely free and open source alternative to coding bootcamps.
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Specs
Languages:
HTML, CSS, Ruby, JavaScript
Features:
Projects, written tutorials
Hide
Get it
here
75
2
Codeasy
All
8
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
The "reading story" approach is interesting and helps to start in programming
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Top
Con
Has only one programming language
Only has a C# track.
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Top
Pro
Really good explanation of the topics
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Top
Con
Covers only basics
It would be nice if this tutorial would cover more in depth C# topics.
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Top
Pro
Step-by-step tutorials
The fundamental theory is represented systematically, from the basic things to more complicated as a whole adventure story.
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Top
Pro
Unique approach to tech stuff learning
No cold theory, fun way to learn coding.
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Top
Pro
Slack for Help
Deeper explanation about the course tasks directly on Slack.
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Specs
Languages:
C#,Python
Features:
Code editor, exercises, story based education
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
44
2
edX
All
9
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
Free
Both edX and the classes are free.
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Top
Con
Lack of engagement in the forums
edX does not have the same forum participation from both students and instructors that other websites do, and the form of engagement often does not encourage discussion.
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Top
Pro
Offers courses from well known schools
edX offers courses from a wide range of well known colleges and universities including Harvard, MIT, UC Berkeley, Cornell and more.
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Top
Con
Courses aren't always available
While edX does offer some self-paced courses, you may end up waiting for the course of your choice to be run.
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Top
Pro
Large selection of science courses
edX offers a wide variety of science-related courses. This makes it a great resource for learning not only specific programming languages, but also other topics relating to computer science.
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Top
Con
The forums are difficult to navigate
The forums are difficult to sort by date and topic, and are unintuitive to navigate.
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Top
Pro
A lot of topics (subjects)
Topics include biology, business, chemistry, computer science, economics, finance, electronics, engineering, food and nutrition, history, humanities, law, literature, math, medicine, music, philosophy, physics, science, statistics and more.
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Top
Pro
Offer certificates for some courses
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Specs
Languages:
Computer languages, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish, Italian, Japanese, English, Russian, French
Features:
Forum, video tutorials, written tutorials, projects
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free / paid
64
3
Coursera
All
8
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Some courses offer a verified certificate for a fee
There is an option to earn a verified certificate as proof you completed the course (for use on LinkedIn, resumes etc.). The cost varies between courses, but is generally around $49-$60.
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Top
Con
Courses are not always available
Courses are run on set dates, though some courses provide access to the material whether or not the course is running (however, there will be far less student activity in the forums when the course is not running). Some courses only make their material available when the course is running, so you may have to wait a long period (sometimes months) for your course to be offered.
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Top
Pro
High quality courses from well known universities
Many courses offered at Coursera are from well known universities (such as Stanford and Princeton) and instructed by their professors. Often the material taught in the Coursera courses is material from the actual university course.
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Top
Con
You cannot take the full courses for free
While you used to be able to take courses for free and earn a statement of accomplishment, this is no longer the case. You can only audit the courses if you are not paying. Coursera makes it seem like you should also do the quizzes, but the submit button says "Upgrade to submit".
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Top
Pro
Wide selection of courses
Coursera offers over 1000 courses on a variety of different topics. Courses are offered on learning to code and specific languages, but there is also a large selection of courses that would be beneficial to someone wanting to learn more about computer science as well (algorithms, data science, computer security) and plenty others.
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Top
Pro
You can audit courses for free
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Top
Pro
Courses offered in a variety of languages (with transcriptions available)
Coursera offers courses from all around the world, resulting in courses taught in English, French, Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Turkish and a long list of others. Transcriptions for a large number of languages are offered for each course.
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Specs
Languages:
English, Spanish, Chinese, Korean
Features:
Video tutorials, tests, forum
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
57
7
SoloLearn
All
10
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Completely free
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Top
Con
Only the most commonly used languages are covered.
C++, Java, JavaScript, C#, Python, SQL, PHP, Swift, Ruby, JQuery, HTML, CSS. You won't find anything less common like Haskell, Erlang, Elixir, Common Lisp, Scheme, Clojure, Rust, etc.
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Top
Pro
Offline learning mode for mobile apps
Allows learning while disconnected from the net.
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Top
Con
Limited usefulness for intermediate or experienced programmers
No advanced coding challenges. Look for those on other sites like hackerrank.
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Top
Pro
Easy for beginners
Anyone can get started with this.
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Top
Pro
Share and modify others' projects
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Top
Pro
Browser-based code playgrounds
No software installation needed, just a modern web browser. On mobile devices though the mobile apps are highly recommended.
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Top
Pro
Excellent mobile apps available
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Top
Pro
Gamification
XP, levels, badges, certificates, etc.
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Specs
Languages:
C/C++, Java, JavaScript, C#, Python, SQL, PHP, Swift, Ruby, JQuery, HTML, CSS.
Offline operation:
Yes
Questions throughout the course:
Yes
Mobile apps:
Yes
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Experiences
Free
57
9
exercism.org
All
4
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Human review and feedback
Rather than merely test for code correctness, Exercism uses peer review to improve general programming techniques. Users are encouraged to comment on others' solutions, and refine their own based on feedback.
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Con
Custom commandline client
Exercism requires using a CLI utility to fetch and submit exercises. This is inconvenient compared to web-only alternatives, and poses an additional barrier to entry for some users.
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Pro
Practice with production tools
Unlike many code practice websites, Exercism requires the user to develop and test entirely offline, submitting only the finished code. This promotes familiarity with essential tools and workflow, not just the bare language.
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Specs
Languages:
Bash, C, C++, C#, Clojure, Dart, Elixir, Erlang, Go, Java, JavaScript, Kotlin, Python, Ruby, Rust,TypeScript
Features:
Exercises
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here
178
22
NEXT Academy
All
8
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Has an in-person training mode
You can enroll in the Blended Learning Platform where you can meet with your mentor face to face. This is best for students who learn more with one-on-one mentoring.
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Con
Requires your commitment and time
Next Academy's courses are not self-paced and follow a set of schedule.
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Pro
Offers certificates of achievement after each course
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Con
Paid
Most full-tme courses are around US $2000.
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Pro
Practice the code after each video
After each video, you will be given the chance to build projects and do exercises to test what you have learned.
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Pro
Human review and feedback
Students will get actual feedback from mentors on coding projects/exercises.
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Pro
Bite-sized lessons
Next Academy doesn't overwhelm beginners with information. The lessons are bite-sized, and video lectures/tutorials are between 2-5mins long.
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Specs
Languages:
HTML, CSS, Javascript, Ruby on Rails, Swift for iOS
Features:
Projects, Video Tutorials, Exercises, Code Editor
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Experiences
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3
1
CSS-Tricks
All
4
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Examples are well explained
All posts, whether they are written by Chris Coyier or a guest blogger, are very clear and well explained. Each example has code snippets with easy-to-follow explanations of the code and theory behind the specific concept. Possible issues you may run into with the code are often addressed, so you know how to tackle bugs that may pop up.
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Con
Not a good starting place for a complete beginner
CSS-Tricks does not follow the structure of a traditional tutorial, starting at the basics and gradually increasing in difficulty. Instead, each blog post addresses a specific topic (such as responsive images, debugging keyframe animations etc.). Therefore it's better suited to someone who has already been introduced to CSS and is looking for more info on a specific topic, or wants to discover new concepts.
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Top
Pro
Codepen makes code review easy
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Pro
Frequently updated
CSS-Tricks is extremely active, being updated every day or two with a new blog post. Despite the frequency of the posts, the quality always remains high.
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here
14
0
LiveEdu.tv
All
6
Experiences
Pros
5
Specs
Top
Pro
Live educational projects and tutorials
You can learn about programming, game development, design and more from best tech minds
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Top
Pro
Large variety of courses
Courses on software development, VR, AR, 3D modeling, and much more.
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Top
Pro
Learn live from top tech minds
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Top
Pro
Stream your own projects
You can stream & monetize your own projects as a broadcaster.
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Top
Pro
Amazing platform for networking
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Specs
Languages:
PHP, JavaScript, C-C++, HTML-CSS, Java, Python, Unity, Ruby, Laravel, & more
Features:
Livestreams, Projects, Tutorials, Live Forum, Chat, Download project files & videos, 24h customer support
Special Offer:
-5% OFF on Pro Account - Coupon Code: JULIA2017-Discount
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here
11
0
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