![]() ![]() Now that I finished this course, i can start designing databases OMO, of course still have to google for many many things, but at least I have a functioning vision about how SQL and DBMS work. I personally feel like this course is a huge kickstarter. So I highly recommend his MySQL course, because it's really straightforward, and it really saves you precious weeks/months (depending on how much time you have available for learning at home). This Django tutorial teaches you everything you need to get started. and I figure, I didn't really have to, because it would've taken probably months for me! Well I could've gathered the informations this course gave me one by one from free sources, but neither am I diligent enough, nor motivated enough to do this all by myself. I recently purchased Mosh's MySQL course, and it took around 3 weeks for me to process it. Sure, go ahead and dig out everything for yourself using free videos, and courses. ![]() So, my suggestion is to maybe look at other options first that do not cost any money. He later found that, in reality, we only use about 20 of what we were taught in school. Also, if you have discord, I highly recommend the Python Discord server as there are lots of helpful people on there for any of your python coding needs. Mosh Hamedani is one of the best and most benevolent software engineers who graduated with a Bachelor of Science in 2000. You are not the first to ask a similar question, so take some time to search this sub for folks that have wondered the same. O'riely books are great, Packt is hit or miss, and titles like Fluent Ptyhon and Automate the Boring Stuff with Python are recommended often. They don't do the learn in one videos like Mosh or Derek Banas.īooks are your friend. Again, it's a good course for foundation building and it will expand your horizons to what's possible and give you some exposure to Bash.īeyond that, Arjan Codes and Corey Schaefer are solid YouTube channels to follow. It teaches you basic python, scripting, the linux CLI(bash), regex, working with CSV files, testing, problem solving, etc. The quality of the content is quite good, but you will want to take notes and practice what you've learned as it moves on quickly without cementing the topics in your brain. The only paid course(which you can also audit for free) that I can recommend right now is Google's IT Automation with Python. If anything, it helps you with muscle memory for typing up python. But it can help forge a solid foundation to build everything else from. Lots of typing and exercises that build upon themselves. I always recommend Zed Shaw's book, Learn Python 3 the Hard Way. What someone really needs to do is exercises and lots of typing up code. Learn in one videos or the like really don't ask you to do anything but watch. But IMO, that style of learning just doesn't fare well with learning to code. Mosh does have a popular youtube channel. ![]()
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