When I was first learning, I was able to study in college so I was exposed to a traditional way of learning. I found that to be helpful, but as time has gone on and I have become more experienced in software development I now lean towards big project books / courses when they are available.
Most recently I used "The Simple Haskell Handbook" to kickstart my Haskell journey and it was fun to be able to build a simple Continuous Integration (CI) server and see how to build a bigger project with Haskell!
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
When I was first learning, I was able to study in college so I was exposed to a traditional way of learning. I found that to be helpful, but as time has gone on and I have become more experienced in software development I now lean towards big project books / courses when they are available.
Most recently I used "The Simple Haskell Handbook" to kickstart my Haskell journey and it was fun to be able to build a simple Continuous Integration (CI) server and see how to build a bigger project with Haskell!