114
spyke
6y

I'm not sure if I would read either of these

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  • 5
    Read neither. Learn by doing and enormously helpful online documentation!
  • 0
    @FelisPhasma yeah I've taken a couple small introductory courses online, it seems interesting but I hear nightmare stories about people having issues
  • 2
    The good parts book still looks to thick, I don't think lde trust it. That's said, have you heard of WebAssembly? Its kinda amazing, let's you dev for web with c/c++/rust/etc. Currently porting my OpenGL C++ code to it, got it up and running pretty quick.
  • 0
    @hexc right? Haha, no I hadn't heard of WebAssembly yet, ty for the heads up!
  • 2
    W3Schools
  • 2
    Mdn is a really good ressource. Also you dont know javascript. I dont recommend js the good parts
  • 1
  • 1
    Should we be concerned the good parts book isn't very thick haha. I'm one of those people who sit on a train reading tech books on my Kindle. So could devour these, no shame :p
  • 1
    “JavaScript: The Good Parts” is Douglas Crockford blubbering irrelevant twaddle for 170 pages. Read “You Don’t Know JS” instead - it’s actually helpful from a non-antagonistic standpoint.
  • 3
    Read secrets of a JavaScript ninja.

    That's what the world needs, more ninjas. Be one with the brotherhood
  • 0
    @gymmerDeveloper I'll definitely look into this
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