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demshpw2020-05-07 14:00:26
IT education
demshpw, 2020-05-07 14:00:26

Should I buy online courses?

I always wanted to learn programming, but at one time I missed the moment. Now I want to catch up and change the type of activity. I watched a lot of online universities and courses, most of the reviews are similar to those bought. Stopped for skillbox with their 12 month PHP course. But there are vague doubts. Maybe someone had experience with this or other online universities and can tell? Or can someone direct you to a different path of learning, choose a different language? I really need advice. I am practically not familiar with programming, all I have done in my whole life is "Hello World" in C#. And so, I myself am 25 years old, I have spoken English and a great zeal to study the field of activity that interests me.

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10 answer(s)
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Ilya, 2020-05-07
@sarapinit

Only if the money spent motivates you to do it. All information is also available in the form of books, articles, reports. Books are paid, the rest is not.

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Vladimir Korotenko, 2020-05-07
@firedragon

Purely from my teaching experience.
Students range from dumb to smarties who have already outgrown you, but the curriculum obliges you to read the course. In the end, everyone knows something.
The best experience is gained through your bumps with a competent curator who will correct you. The point is not even what he will say, but the fact that you know that they will help, and you are also ashamed of the fact that you are tearing people off and you are digging yourself, so much so that the curators are surprised.
In general, everything depends on you.

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yerdnaandrey, 2020-05-07
@yerdnaandrey

There are clubs where the same courses are free. There is a pdfdrive where all the books are free.
I never understood people who are careless with their money. Don't do nonsense.

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approximate solution, 2020-05-07
@approximate_solution

demshpw , You can even read books to the holes (which you were advised to read above), but in fact, until you start implementing your projects, you will remain a "dead programmer". As a rule, the tasks from the books have almost nothing to do with the problems that arise during the development of the project, and usually the remaining 60 percent google and learn through trial and error. Therefore, I’ll add on my own, if you want to start programming, first select the area (you can also do a lot of things in PHP, many follow in the footsteps of development under CMS, some go into development for frameworks, etc.). Once you've learned the basics of PHP, move on to writing code from small design implementations to large ones.

In 2020? php? start learning? I beg of you!
On Go, buy somewhere or download a course, always in English.

Do not listen to anyone, a lot is written in PHP, and it happens quite well. Plus they make good money. PHP will live happily ever after, it has its own market, its own share of the web. There is a lot of legacy code, a lot of new code, good updates (the language is not dead). Jumping through languages ​​like a young lady at balls is not worth it, programming is not about a language - but about thinking, the ability to build algorithms, solve problems, destructure them, and help business.
Judging by hh - go, developers are choking on job offers, 1100 vacancies for the whole of Russia (+\-)
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o4evidec, 2020-05-07
@o4evidec

In fact, everything is much simpler.
You won't be able to buy Courses and become a programmer.
Paid courses for specific purposes. For example, you have tripled your job or there is a vacancy in mind, you need to quickly gain maximum knowledge in this area already having basic concepts. then of course you can buy a course specifically for these purposes.
But if you need the basics, a basic understanding of the subject of study, then buying courses is money down the drain.
As the 1C programmer Ilya Leontiev says, every day for an hour of viewing and studying the subject, and already in the first week it will become clear what it is and whether you are ready to spend your time on it.
It took me three months of study and six months of work as an intern. The result is a 30% increase in wages.

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Dimonchik, 2020-05-07
@dimonchik2013

everything is nasharu, including the selected courses,
in addition to gaining experience, so take care of it

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lezg1n89, 2020-05-08
@lezg1n89

Actually I have a similar situation. I like doing analytics, and in the process of my work I do a little bit for myself.
But I would like to completely go into this area. But I don’t know if these courses make any sense and whether it will be possible to get a job, but I am already 30 years old.

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Vital8111, 2020-05-09
@Vital8111

I would look towards the "specialist". Borisov teaches PHP very well. To pay or not is your choice. Lots of trackers. I also like profit. Stepantsev. As for me, he explains OOP and MVC well. But I'm not a programmer. I do things for myself.

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Evgen Roev, 2020-05-09
@roevevgen

I would also recommend Dmitry Afanasiev https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLoonZ8wII66...

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Igor Korsakov, 2020-05-09
@netwood

Hey!
I have been developing in different languages ​​for more than 10 years. I can take you as an intern with subsequent employment if we work together. In general, I need a person with spoken English to communicate with foreign clients.
Write to telegram, let's discuss
@igor_korsakov

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