DEV Community

Faria Waseer
Faria Waseer

Posted on

Which is your best tutorial or website to learn javaScript?

Oldest comments (29)

Collapse
 
dimitarstbc profile image
Dimitar Stoev

I would say the Mozilla docs ans javascript.info.

That's all you need basically.

Don't fall into the trap with the tutorials. Check a few to get started, but move to real projects as soon as possible!

Collapse
 
fairywsr profile image
Faria Waseer

I will try to follow this pattern 👍

Collapse
 
amtins profile image
André
Collapse
 
pequenodharma1 profile image
Tiago Nunes

Good piece of advice right here

Collapse
 
devash98 profile image
Ashique Billa Molla

I haven't taken a full course on JS, on whichever topic I face issue I google it and append the keyword freecodecamp.org or dev.to and 💥 I get well written understandable articles. Also javascript mdn docs are very good resources.

Collapse
 
fairywsr profile image
Faria Waseer

👍

Collapse
 
dianale profile image
Diana Le

For me I used a combination of resources. A lot of this will depend on your learning style, whether you learn best from watching videos or building your own things.

When I was starting out, Wes Bos's course was great for teaching the fundamentals and context: beginnerjavascript.com/. This is a paid course but he has the notes for free: wesbos.com/javascript. This goes into advanced topics as well, and you won't have to use EVERYTHING when you first start out, but the way he explains things was very easy for me to understand.

Afterwards I started doing the exercises on freecodecamp.org/learn/ and started building my own mini-projects.

I also highly recommend Scrimba which is interactive, meaning you can pause the video and write your own code in the same window and test. I have a paid subscription but you can try out the free courses: scrimba.com/learn/learnjavascript

Collapse
 
rukundob451 profile image
Benjamin Rukundo

These are really awesome resources indeed. Everyone should give a try.

Collapse
 
diek profile image
diek

Codelearn on mobile :)

Collapse
 
diek profile image
diek

Codelearn and advent of code are awesome too

Collapse
 
fairywsr profile image
Faria Waseer

Thanks For sharing 😊

Collapse
 
amin_gholami profile image
Amin Gholamisani

Codecademy.com

Collapse
 
raguay profile image
Richard Guay

The best place to learn coding is stackoverflow.com. You see peoples problems and so many people help to solve it. You can see different ways to attack the same problem which helps you to code better.

Collapse
 
mrwilbroad profile image
wilbroad mark

Follow audereka on YouTube, hope you won’t feel inferior

Collapse
 
tqbit profile image
tq-bit

Brad Traversy's Youtube channel. Taught me all the basics and more about Javascript / Typescript development.

Especially charming due to the project character of the tutorials. There's theory, but usually the videos cut to the chase very quickly.

Collapse
 
akarachen profile image
AkaraChen

javascript.info and Mozilla Web docs

Collapse
 
alco profile image
Jakub Stibůrek • Edited

No borimg videos but practical try-it-yourself course. learnjavascript.online

Collapse
 
fairywsr profile image
Faria Waseer

Really Useful Tip It helps a lot👍

Collapse
 
sylwiavargas profile image
Sylwia Vargas

I'm definitely with you all on the Mozilla docs.

As for a course, I would definitely say that Dan Abramov's JustJavaScript teaches you not only what you can do in JS but also WHY. You can check out the free preview to see if it works for you. Dan Abramov is a co-creator of Redux and has been a member of the React core team for the past few years.

If you like books, I'd recommend Elegant JavaScript and You Don't Know JS. Both are free. However, it's more trivia knowledge so don't kill yourself with it.

Collapse
 
fairywsr profile image
Faria Waseer

Thanks for sharing knowledgeable resources 👍

Collapse
 
epresas profile image
epresas

I would watch a few to get started, but more than tutorials I would watch documentation. I read this series of books and it gave me a good base to start doing small projects and really grasp the concepts, but in the end, is looking for a method that suits you, our brains work different ways and my approach may not work for you or vice-versa.

Collapse
 
pengeszikra profile image
Peter Vivo

For any languages :: codewars

Collapse
 
jeremymonatte profile image
Mbenga

I would have tended to say alligator.io, but I just found out it was closed😭

RIP Little Blog

Collapse
 
peerreynders profile image
peerreynders • Edited

Lots of people seem to like Eloquent JavaScript 3e to learn the language (Chapters 1-11) as opposed to the Browser's Web API (Node-API for Node.js; Deno CLI API for Deno) that was designed to be manipulated with JavaScript.

The language is governed by the ECMAScript Language Specification which is implemented by each JavaScript runtime to some varying degree.

JavaScript the language skills transfer between environments, so it's a good idea to

  1. Know where JavaScript ends and the runtime API begins (or any library or framework for that matter)
  2. Initially focus on learning the language while dealing with the runtime API only as needed

For example, the DOM is a Web API—so the nature it's design cannot be directly be blamed on JavaScript (it follows an entirely separate specification).

Another example is that some beginners seem to be taught in a way that they aren't clear where JavaScript ends and React starts (nothing new same thing used to happen with jQuery)—JavaScript is the core, fundamental skill, React isn't.


Intent to stop using 'null' in my JS code