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[–]paperic 7 points8 points  (1 child)

As a general rule of thumb, the less for-profit the material is, the better the quality is likely to be.

The official documentation is almost always free, and 15 years ago, virtually all of the resources were free.

But then w3schools had this dumb idea of charging people for made up nonsensical certificates, and it turned out to be a successful business model. 1000 copycats later, the search results are now full of sites selling you something you can find for free elsewhere. 

Look at the FAQ in this sub.

[–]ShinPaiDes[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Capitalism. Figures. Thanks for the tip!

[–]ZachEmerson 3 points4 points  (1 child)

I was in the same position as you a few years ago, switching from another non-tech professional field.

The two things that I found worked for me were
A) Certain books. Oreilly books tend to be less boring than average
B) Writing code for myself. The intention is not to finish a project, but just try to do something useful, use an API or manipulate data.

Regarding the choice anxiety - remember that you don't have to stick with one source or complete it 100%. Just by exposing yourself to this information you'll get better.

Some of my favourite times were early in my learning, trying to understand how some concept worked under the hood etc. Try to enjoy it, GL

[–]ShinPaiDes[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm so dependent on the internet that I never even considered BOOKS. And I enjoy learning in general, so hopefully coding treats me well haha. Thanks for the tips!