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udemy course price: $10.99 (was $124.99, 91% OFF, 2 DAYS LEFT AT THIS PRICE SO HURRY UP MOTHERFUCKERS, WHAT ARE U, STUPID? BUY THIS WHILE ITS CHEAP DUMBASS)

*124.99 years later*

udemy course price: $10.99 (was $124.99, 91% OFF, 2 DAYS LEFT AT THIS PRICE SO HURRY UP MOTHERFUCKERS, WHAT ARE U, STUPID? BUY THIS WHILE ITS CHEAP DUMBASS)

Comments
  • 13
    udemy is crap anyways...

    1. full of stolen free youtube videos and the real creator of the videos don't get any money and sending takedown notes for those videos is really hard.

    2. The udemy courses are mostly subpar quality for paid content.

    3. udemy forces the course creators to make advertisement for udemy otherwise he will earn next to nothing.
  • 4
    @heyheni well i just bought a course and the only guy making quality content there is jose salvatierra
  • 3
    Yeah, so go on and start becoming a great Python developer by writing HTML code.
  • 5
    @gamingfail123 lol that youtube ad of that annoying german udemy instructor "wolltest du schon IMMER ein fähiger [iergendetwas] programmierer werden und EIGENE [iergendetwas] programme schreiben?" 😆
  • 1
    I have a general problem with video tutorials about programming (and I've tried Udemy). It's that they are all just a bunch of "follow along by typing the code". I don't want to just write whatever code you're writing. I want to know the why and the theory behind the language. As an example, why write "const" instead of "var" in javascript. They never explain what the different keywords mean, but they expect you to follow along. Why should I follow along when I have no idea as to what I'm writing or lack the understanding why? I'd much rather read the documentation, if all I'm doing is following along some random dude's code.
  • 1
    @heyheni Dann melde dich JETZT an bei Udemy
  • 1
    @Fexell so what do you think about www.javascript30.com type of learning?
  • 1
    @heyheni wesbos ftw.
  • 3
    90% of udemy are crap. The rest 10% however are pure gold.
  • 1
    I actually bought like 4-5 Udemy courses and the overall quality is pretty good. I learned the basics of Node with that (Andrew Mead is pretty nice, giving small "challenges", maybe not enough details but very good overall). I'm also following AI and Deep Learning courses in frrench (official translation from the english one) and the explanation are good for now. I guess the important thing is always to look at multiple courses on the same subject before buying anything.
  • 2
    @Fexell have you ever followed Jeffery Way (Laracasts - PHP Laravel)? If you are into PHP (Laravel in specific), or Vue, then take a look at his free courses.

    I really learned a lot from his free courses, then I went on to buy forever membership package in Laracasts.
  • 1
    @AnonymousDev I second that. Great content there.
  • 1
    @AnonymousDev I have not. I'm not that interested in PHP anymore. Feel like I've got a pretty good idea of it by now (used PHP since like 2012). Right now I'm learning Node, Vue and Feathers js, which I'm also starting to get a hang of. But I am interested in learning some more heavy programming, like C, C++, C#, Java or Python. I did successfully create a prototype app in Android Studio, but I would love to learn more.
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