Websites Recomended For Learning Javascript,Jquery,Phyton,Html and Css
04/11/12
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If U want learn Javascript,jquery,phyton,html and css,Below There a few the websites to learning and practice.
At my old company, I used to program in C# mostly until on day we had a write a giant web app in HTML 5 and Javascript. I’ve done both in the past, but I definitely needed to brush up on my coding skills.
www.codecademy.com
This is probably the most popular online tool for learning to code. It’s
completely free, has a ton of tutorials and is very social integrated.
The best part about it is that it’s very hands-on. All the lessons
include a coding window where you actually type in the code and can run
it.
Codecademy has courses on Javascript, Python, Web Fundamentals (HTML,
CSS), and JQuery. It also has a lot of social features and you can see
how you are doing compared to them. Also, it has a very detailed
tracking system that keeps track of your progress, so you can come back
at any time and start from where you left off.
Overall, it’s definitely one of the best ways to learn to code or to
brush up on your coding skills. They provide full real-world courses
that start from the basics and go all the way to developing fully
interactive web sites running Javascript, JQuery and more.
www.khanacademy.org/cs
Khan Academy just recently added a whole new section on computer
science. If you haven’t been to Khan Academy, it’s all about learning
through videos and interaction. The new Computer Science section is
currently all based on Javascript, but they do a fantastic job. What’s
really cool about this site is that it also has the code window, which
you can use to type and run code, but also has a video that plays along
and dynamically adds code to the window as you play the video.
I found these synced video tutorials with the live coding box to be
extremely helpful, even more so than using Codecademy. Of course, Khan
Academy doesn’t have nearly as many tutorials, but that’s because it’s
just starting out. Give it a year or so and they’ll probably be hundreds
of tutorials on many different languages.
www,teamtreehouse.com
Treehouse is a paid site that I used while working at my company and
it was pretty awesome, especially since I didn’t have to pay for it. It
costs either $25 a month or $50, depending on what services you want,
but they have over 550 courses and a very cool live coding engine like
the other two sites mentioned above.
I liked Treehouse because it had a lot of real-world tutorials like
building a simple version of Facebook, an e-commerce website, building a
responsive design website, etc. Of course, they also have in-depth
tutorials on HTML 5, CSS 3, Ruby on Rails, etc. If you are interested in
Android or iOS programming, they also have courses on those topics.
http://code.google.com/edu/courses.html#ajax_programming
After the three mentioned above, we now get into the standard text
way of learning. There is no interactive coding window or anything like
that. There aren’t even any videos! It’s still a good resource, just
boring since it’s mostly reading. Now that I’ve gotten used to these
interactive coding windows, it’s hard going back to just reading code
and then having to type it in a code editor, compile it, run it, etc,
etc.
There aren’t a lot of courses, but you can learn some Java, C++,
Python, CSS, HTML, Javascript, etc. It’s obviously more geared towards
Google software and services, so if you want to program for Android or
learn to use Google APIs, then this is a good place to start.
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