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Emphyzem2015-05-04 19:28:53
Web development
Emphyzem, 2015-05-04 19:28:53

Retraining at the age of 29: how best to organize front-end self-study?

Good afternoon! A little bit about yourself. I'm 29, I have a well-paid job (not related to IT), but not so long ago I started to have thoughts about the lack of self-realization and the unwillingness to develop in this direction (early "mid-life crisis"?). I would like to try my hand at developing client-side web applications, since I have some experience in html and css, a little jquery (I made simple pages as a hobby), programming at the level of institute labs. Need advice on organizing training for front-end development. In what order to study technologies? How deep to learn pure js? Should you specialize in a particular framework (like angular2), or learn a few? At what stage to comprehend professional development tools (version control, assemblers, preprocessors, etc.)?
Thank you all in advance for your attention!

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12 answer(s)
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tef, 2015-05-04
@Emphyzem

html -> css -> js -> end
JS learn all and practice

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Radmir, 2015-05-05
@RadmirZ

As we wrote earlier, do not teach technology, learn to solve problems. As a rule, you will be given tasks / problems and customers need to do / solve them - learn this, and technologies are just tools. We solved problems using one thing 5 years ago, now everything is outdated and we use another, in a couple of years everything will also change and we will change everything again, but the essence is the same, we have always solved some problems and completed some tasks and they got paid for it.

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Artem Kiryanov, 2015-05-04
@hacker342

But I’ll honestly say that the mentor is of no use, well, maybe I got such a mentor who answered any question: google! That is, he didn’t really explain anything, another tip: find a group of js developers and communicate with them, for example, I found a Ruby community + one guy organized a conf in slack and now we are sitting there and solving the problems that we have formed, of course, one of us, cooler and stronger, and gives us lyuli if we do something wrong. If this is not possible, then they drank the project, as mentioned above, and already with this you can go to some office.

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Denis Krivoschekov, 2015-05-04
@densomart

It’s better not to self-learn for a long time at the beginning, only if you want to learn the very base. Find a way to learn where it is taught, or learn from someone (mentor). There are many options online now. Oneself is in danger of escaping from reality; or maybe just because it will be faster on good courses - because everything is strictly on the case.

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Alexey, 2015-05-04
@Murmurianez

It's cool that the HTML + CSS + jQuery base is already there. Open the latest edition of Flanagan (6 or 7) and start studying while sitting at the computer. Immediately come up with some kind of project and drink slowly. Then, when you feel confident enough and the first project is written, take a simpler framework like Backbone and write a second project, well, try Node.js - it's not difficult there.

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terrykon, 2015-05-09
@terrykon

I have a similar situation. 30 years old, business, career ... also, apparently, a midlife crisis ... self-study without a system, from books, on a real project still does not give systemic knowledge. for 9 months I stuffed bumps hoo.
my advice - if you know English, study at TeamTreeHouse .
If you don't know English, try it anyway.
I tried a bunch of online courses (CodeSchool, Codecademy, CodeAvengers, Lynda...) and read books, but the most understandable, systematized courses are there. It is possible to select a track (curriculum) and follow it.

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Optimus, 2015-05-05
Pyan @marrk2

Learn html then learn css. Do not use any preprocessors!! Then practice is needed to consolidate the knowledge of html and css (in principle, today part of the animation, effects can already be done only on css without JS). And then, when you feel confident in these 2 areas, then you already study pure JS, and switch to JS frameworks only when the need arises and not just because there is nothing to do ... And do not forget that some JS frameworks are not intended for websites, they are for apps...

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Alexander Yudaev, 2015-05-14
@Alex_mc

I taught CGI (yes, there used to be such a language) and JS by examples.
I downloaded the finished layout, took a screenshot and made the site from scratch, and then compared what I did as in the template and what didn’t.
There is no 100% correct solution to the problem, but experience in development will come and you will be able to compare with other web programmers.

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Artem Spiridonov, 2016-02-08
@customtema

You can learn "pure JS" thoroughly in 3-5 days. If this achievement inspires you - why not try it?
I'm about to turn 34 and I've never stopped learning in this job. Such is the specificity.

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Homsa Toft, 2015-05-05
@kostein

You can already start preprocessors, there is nothing complicated. Builders and Version Control as projects grow. I'm thinking about courses.
Pure Js the deeper the better.

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Sergey, 2015-05-14
@mak_net

I don't think that one front-end can feed a family. It may be better to choose mobile development (Android) for learning or back-end (ASP.NET). In general, now there is a boom in casual toys for social networks or android. It might be worth looking into this. And hungry schoolchildren and students will not let sites be cut)

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eargonx, 2016-08-18
@eargonx

hubhubhub.com/povyshenie-kvalifikacii-it-specialisto how to study IT yourself

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