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Maciek Chmura
Maciek Chmura

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at maciek.cloud

How to learn JavaScript

This is the second post of a series about my path of learning JavaScript.
The last post described my opinion about what not to do while learning JS.

How to learn it then?

I think learning JavaScript has nothing to do with JavaScript.

...

wat

Let me explain.

Just like my Unnamed Friend advised, I needed to learn how to program.
In general.

  • What are variables, functions, objects, arrays, strings, ints?
  • How do computers even work?
  • What happens when you type an address to a browser?
  • What is a server?
  • What is a database?
  • Why functions return something?
  • What is an algorithm?
  • What is a browser API?
  • What is AJAX?

A lot of unknowns and no clear starting point, when you just want to make a Todo app in React... ๐Ÿคฆโ€โ™‚๏ธ

Luckily there is a starting point. And it is an awesome one.

Part 1: Fundamentals

CS50

CS50

An introduction to the intellectual enterprises of computer science and the art of programming.

Taught by David J. Malan @davidjmalan and his team.

I love this course. I would like to do it again and discover everything one more time ๐Ÿ˜…

For each week you will have a lecture by David
(while watching it, your ๐Ÿ’กโšก 'AHAAAAA' light bulb will shine every few minutes).
Followed up by shorter lecture with coding examples.
You finish each week with a coding project and run it through an automatic test.

You will be exposed to very interesting problems with many technologies.

Here are the topics that were covered in the scope of this course during my take on it.

  • Week 1: Introduction to programming in C language. Create 2 CLI programs in C.
  • Week 2: Big O, Sorting Algorithms, Binary Search, Recursion. Create 2 cyphering CLI programs with C.
  • Week 3: Call Stack, Pointers, Dynamic Memory Allocation. Create a program to manipulate images in C
  • Week 4: Structures, Custom Types, Singly-Linked Lists, Hash Tables, Tries, Stack, Queues. Create a spell checker in C.
  • Week 5: IP, TCP, HTTP, HTML, CSS
  • Week 6: Dynamic Programming, Introduction to Python.
  • Week 7: Servers, Python and Flask. Create 2 CLI programs in Python.
  • Week 8: Flask, MVC, SQL. Implement a stock-trading website.
  • Week 9: JavaScript, DOM, Ajax. Implement a news map app.
  • Week 10 and 11: Final Project

After completing it you will have a pretty good understanding of what is needed to build an app.

Suddenly you will not ask: "UGHHHH, why it is coded like that??!!"
And will say: "๐Ÿ’กAhhhh, it is coded like that because..."

Part 2: Building

Now you are ready to dig into JavaScript.
And the best way to learn is by building.
Some ideas about what to build:

  • tic-tac-toe game with vanilla JS
  • tic-tac-toe with React now you know what problems React solve!
  • Node backend with a database on Heroku
  • React app with data from Firebase

Depending on how much time you have for learning, this can take from 6 months to a year.

Now you have a solid understanding of what programming is about.
You have a handful of completed projects on GitHub.

Part 3: Expand your knowledge

You can dig deeper into JavaScript.
You can follow this awesome roadmap made by @kamranahmedse.
Build more complex apps.

Go and learn what interest you.
That's it ๐Ÿ˜€.

Have fun!

Top comments (3)

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byrro profile image
Renato Byrro

This part of javascript.info is memorable ;)

Overall, I liked your post, thanks for sharing these tips.

On the other hand, I was a bit skeptical about some parts.

For example: how building "two cyphering CLI programs with C" would be relevant to modern web development? Apology for any ignorance, I just can't see the value...

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maciekchmura profile image
Maciek Chmura

I think the main reason to build those CLI programs was to get familiar with writing code.
At that point in time, the student knows almost nothing.

It is just a practice to write code blocks, variables, and functions.
For sure, cyphering in C is not common in web development :) Maybe this topic was chosen to interest the student in some problem, and let it solve it with code.

Just a fun, small program to get you started writing code :)

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byrro profile image
Renato Byrro

Got it, sounds fair to me! Thanks for clarifying.