On the 18th-20th, Code School received an email saying that it was a free weekend campaign. Again, I've summarized Python and Django among the things I'm interested in. However, the Code School learning site seems to be down. .. ..
I tried pythonI of progate. When I bought an apple, I entered the number and calculated the change. It was a sample of a calculator. It was up to the point of using character output (print), variable input / conversion (str, int), and if statement. At 1:45 minutes, I skipped it quickly and it ended in 30 minutes. It feels like it doesn't take long for me to skip over, but from the WEB, I felt that it was a little tedious not only for loading but also for copying letters. Since I was charged from the middle of pythonII, I paid the membership fee. It's a monthly fee, so I wonder if I should do other things as well. .. .. I would like to see if I can return to a free membership after doing it. PythonII took 35 minutes. It was a practice of list, for, dictionary, while, break, continue. The content was still a shopping program. PythonIII took 25 minutes. Functions, scopes, multiple arguments, function modularization, standard library calls. The content is a rock-paper-scissors game. Somehow it ended up feeling unsatisfactory. Since I paid for it, I also tried command line and git, but it took about 10 minutes each.
Code School's free weekend campaign started around 10am on Saturday, so I tried two Django courses by Monday night. It's about 30 minutes each, and it's about 5 hours in total. ■ Good points It feels like turning the basics of creating urls and creating views and templates over and over again. I will make models and migrate after that. Lectures on Video have solid materials, and even if you don't understand English very well, you can understand (I feel) unexpectedly. Up to user authentication. ■ What is not enough Bootstrap and Ajax are also coming in, but it doesn't seem to matter much. I touch on one-to-many relationships, but not many-to-many. Generally, it tends to be like this, but I don't know how to operate it in production. ■ What kind of person is the course for? People who are interested in Django and would like to take a quick look at other frameworks before introducing them in earnest. People who like this kind of code course. People who use Django when they change jobs or move.
After that, I received a half-price discount campaign email. I wonder if I'm doing a free weekend campaign aiming for this. You will want to enter.
Python, Django CodeAcademy
site | Course | language | cost | Learning time |
---|---|---|---|---|
dotinstall | Getting Started with Python 3 | Japanese | free | 1h |
Progate | Python | Japanese | free?Paid? | 6h |
Code School | Try Python | English | free | 6video |
Flying Through Python | English | 29$/Month site | 14video | |
Try Django | English | 29$/Month site | 7video | |
Digging Into Django | English | 29$/Month site | 14video | |
CodeAcademy | Learn Python | English | free | 10h |
Learn ReactJS: Part I | English | Simple version free | 6h | |
Learn ReactJS: Part II | English | Simple version free | 5h | |
Udemy(Freenotesonly) | A Beginners Guide to Django! | English | free | 2h |
Try Django 1.11 // Python Web Development | English | free | 8h | |
Python and Django Full Stack Web Developer Bootcamp | English | 1200 yen (discounted) | 32h |
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