![]() Github is owned by microsoft, if you check their terms of service they legally own all code uploaded, its unsafe to use, but is promoted everywhereĪnyone who mentions that you can host by yourself from home on any machine you have gets downvoted to oblivion while expensive hosting options from multi billion dollar companies get upvoted like crazy even though it loses control of project, provides little to no benefit, and you get lie after lie about safety and other issues. My question is, anyone that has gone down the self taught path and has gotten stuck how did you break through and what sources helped you learn best? I just feel like I’m not getting everything I need to get a competitive start. I got a Udemy course to help me teach the syntax of JS and things like the DOM. ![]() ![]() My problem is that you have so many branches of JS like Angular, React, Node, the list goes on, and it feels a little overwhelming. Now I went to school for cybersecurity and I’m only 25, but I have a strong interest in coding and eventually want to break into that field (especially web dev). Where I’m lost is I just feel there is sooo much to learn with JavaScript that it’s difficult to self teach. Now could I land a developer job? Probably not (yet), but my point is I understand the basics of flow control, structuring code, etc. For starters I’m not clueless when it comes to coding, I know enough python/java to write basic programs and for the most part understand most code that I read. Hey all, I’m searching for some advice as I’m feeling a little lost in learning. Personal blog posts that are relevant to the subreddit's stated subject matter don't need prior approval (and are encouraged!). If you want to post something self-promotional, please message the mods first. Titles that begin with "hey guys" will be removed. If you're in doubt, message the mods first. The following are not allowed: Requests for subscribers, asking for "test users" for your new JS course, offering paid mentorships, and/or premium courses. If you’re asking for help, include enough information for others to recreate your problem. With a nod to practicality, questions and posts about HTML, CSS, and web developer tools are also encouraged. Everyone should feel comfortable asking any and all JavaScript questions they have here. This subreddit is a place for people to learn JavaScript together.
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