I would say develop, most people don't code unless their newbies or at a start-up.Coding isn't for everyone. Either you love it or you hate it. If you can code though, you'll be employed rather easily.
Yea it's definitely bigger, doesn't spoon feed you like codeacademy so you have to do a little googling every now and then.It's a good start. It had a lot of shyt I did in school but way more condense
The sheer size of it lets people know that you'll have more than a passing familiarity with the topics if you make it through all the certificates.I've been hearing the freecodecamp certificates are legit as far as merit is concerned. Some of them are lengthy though, 800 hours on the projects alone, but it's good to know people in the workforce take it seriously
I advice everyone to do freecodecamp. Quincy is good at what he does. If you live in a metro, they have weekend meetups on facebook. You can buy books if you get stuck. For the most part, I enjoyed it but I didn't really care to code.Yea it's definitely bigger, doesn't spoon feed you like codeacademy so you have to do a little googling every now and then.
The sheer size of it lets people know that you'll have more than a passing familiarity with the topics if you make it through all the certificates.
I would say develop, most people don't code unless their newbies or at a start-up.
Medical Laboratory Sciences. In the US, there are severe shortages in the workforce due to new (higher) standards for certification and education. It is something that has well paid positions at multiple levels of degrees, although Associate and Bachelor are the most common.
Get a job that actually has human value
It won't. It's borderline over-rated. Genuinely think there's more money learning how to design
No there isn't
What they don't tell you in those stats is this.
They don't count the people who wash out of the camps, so of course its 97% of people. The rest were kicked out for poor performance.
If you get a job making $40k a year, they count that as a win. If one person gets an 80k a year job, they can put it on the books.
A lot of the people going in there already have degrees. Meaning they are college educated changing careers.
You have to really really really really like solving problems with a different way of thinking.
I figured out that I really like front-end stuff and I'll probably stick with that (HTML,CSS,Javascript).
Don't quit your day job just yet. You better dabble first.
And the folks clowning @bdizzle
Dude put in so much work in that sticky thread, he was the reason I got my A+ to begin with
Got an interview Tuesday![]()
no there isn't unless you are full stack developer and do both. Also unless you specialize in something, you are going to need years of experience before getting a decent job for or programming. I recommend back end and front end web/server stuff.It won't. It's borderline over-rated. Genuinely think there's more money learning how to design
no, enjoy it, coming off a factory jobs, I'm likeDo coders have to sit in front of a computer all day and type? Wouldnt that make you go insane?
Why did you tag @bdizzle ? He gets money lol