Despite the (valid) criticisms you will see here, you have to start learning somewhere, so an app will have to do. Or some tutorials, there is a bunch on Youtube.
Some 5 years ago Codecademy was the trendy app, Exercism as well. I’m out of the loop these days.
The goal is getting an internship (even unpaid) as quickly as possible. Most real skills are not taught on these courses, or anywhere formally.
Aside of that, once you get through the basic level, start reading threads on Hackernews and lobste.rs. You will understand nothing. And that’s good. Try to make sense of it by googling definitions and concepts, that’s how you can learn CS theory outside of a uni.
Despite the (valid) criticisms you will see here, you have to start learning somewhere, so an app will have to do. Or some tutorials, there is a bunch on Youtube. Some 5 years ago Codecademy was the trendy app, Exercism as well. I’m out of the loop these days.
The goal is getting an internship (even unpaid) as quickly as possible. Most real skills are not taught on these courses, or anywhere formally.
Aside of that, once you get through the basic level, start reading threads on Hackernews and lobste.rs. You will understand nothing. And that’s good. Try to make sense of it by googling definitions and concepts, that’s how you can learn CS theory outside of a uni.
Thank you.
What’s the most useful thing/language/skill/topic to learn? Something that can be turned into a real profession down the line.
It really comes down on what you want to do.
Python for general purpose
Rust, C and C++ for systems engineering (my recommendation)
Typescript or JavaScript Frameworks if you want to be a front end guy
Pro tip: once you know a lang, learning new ones becomes relatively easy.