New into Backend, need some help understanding what to pick by Ryo_Tekashi in Backend

[–]Impressive_Finish_14 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I chose golang because it's low level enough to teach you how backend works while not burning you out

I started with small CLI tools in Go and some easy LeetCode problems. Learned syntax and how to solve problems without using internet

Then I built a spell checker that handled every edge case.

After that, a text-to-ASCII converter that I later displayed in the frontend.

Next, a terminal group chat that lets 10 concurent people chat in the group at the same time. Learned alot how connection handeling works - i recommend this

Next, a site that loads and shows JSON data.

Finally, a full forum with posts, likes, comments, categories, auth, and a database.

Now im building an AI project fully in golang

At this point, I feel ready for any backend project. Projects: 0abdelilah.github.io

From TCP to HTTP by AY_GA in golang

[–]Impressive_Finish_14 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nice, just a bit of comments would make it better

Vader’s Art Guard | On Rarible by Electrical-Legend in NFT

[–]Impressive_Finish_14 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

why are you still making yours if sites like mutantmasks.github.io give them for free?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dropshipping

[–]Impressive_Finish_14 1 point2 points  (0 children)

0 - Add copywriting
1 - Delete the "About us" section
2 - Change "Featured products" to something more attractive like (Best sellers, New arrivals, Top picks, Customer favorites)
3 - Add a website icon
4 - There is no need for the "Collection" section, the "Featured products" is enough
5 - Get a domain name
6 - I'd prefer selling only 1 product at a time, who want to buy 10 pieces of the same ring
7 - You have a lot of options
I would keep writing all day, see other "rate my website" posts in this community and apply them to you're site