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Not sure if this has been mentioned, but I've come across a very well presented and free code tutorial site called www.codeacademy.com. It's all done on the site too.
Going to try the Ruby course tonight after work. I did one and it rewards you medals! I mean...I'm so going to want to learn now....gold friggin medal!Last edited by hudson; 21-01-2014, 12:50.
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I've found there are quite a few of these sites. Namely Code School and Treehouse.
I had a quick look at a Ruby tutorial on Code School and it was amazingly presented looking like a Mega Man game.
Before being enticed by video game (aargh my weakness), I decided to look all these sites up to see if they were worth it and to see which one had the most positive reviews.
From what I read, it seemed Treehouse was the most positively talked about. Mainly due to it's structure (tracks, videos and achievements). After giving Treehouse a go, I did find it more engaging. It had me downloading software (Ruby on Rails - I think this is more to my needs for what I want to achieve), I was creating simple dynamic content (status update) and learning and using github. I had it all going on locally which seemed to make more sense than doing it online on a website.
The tutorial, was pretty long, but enjoyable. The video teachers are quite amusing and quirky too. You can quit and resume at any time. Tutorials are usually based on making a project, so you may find yourself delving into things like HTML and css like my tutorial did.
I'm going to stick this Treehouse one out for a bit. There's a 2 week trial, but then it's about 8 quid a month.
Sign up for expert-led video courses to start your journey into coding, programming, and design. Perfect for beginners, intermediate, and advanced learners.
Last edited by hudson; 23-01-2014, 06:29.
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So....
My helpdesk job has a programming goal. C#, to be precise. The company's internal applications are written in it and they were looking for someone who either is a programmer or is interested/willing to learn.
That's me!
All the programming guides here in the office are in Japanese so I'm looking online for now. Might pop in to Tsutaya or somewhere and see if there are any decent, used C# books in English.
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So this is actually happening.
My manager has ordered my copy of Visual Studio.
Right now I'm learning SQL so I can get an idea of how our databases actually work. One of my goals for 2016 is to take my manager's old programs and update them to work with the newer database thing called TeraData.
Here's hoping it won't be a waste of ?130,000...
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