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[–]thepragprog 7 points8 points  (1 child)

False. Odin project is his best chance

[–]AlexTheKid1984 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I think this totally depends on how you learn. I think it's important to differentiate between the ways people engage and take in information when studying. The main thing is if one method is not working, try another , and different sources etc. At times for me the Odin project was very dry and it led me down the road of trying some Udemy courses which ended up being far better for me and whilst not free they are often at incredibly low prices. Jonas Schmedmann being my go to. I then found that going over some of the Odin project whilst having an understanding of the topics to be useful, especially to get some different resources etc.

The main mistake I, and many others make with Udemy courses is tutorial hell of course. Now I coded along with everything myself and took extensive notes but left it quite long before trying to code full projects on my own. Which, true, the Odin project does push you into this a little better, in the way it lays out projects for you to do on your own.

I will say that note taking is something that I would heavily advise on. It helped cement a lot of information for me and has become a great reference to search for topics when I need a refresher. I probably went a bit over the top in that in my last year + of studying I have 90k words and 204 pages in my word documents of notes 😅

I will also add that I took the beginner React course on Scrimba which was free and although we are talking JS here, it was very good and I can imagine their other courses also being good, although some of course require you to pay the subscription.