Aimed to help students starting university this year to prepare for and settle into their studies, the Jumpstart University hub has been developed by The Open University in collaboration with the Russell Group.
Unlike most introductions to JavaScript, these lessons present an even mix of browser programming and server programming. We give each topic only shallow coverage; if you want to know more, there are many other free tutorials you can dive into once you’ve mastered the basics, some of which are both up-to-date and well designed.
This site contains code repositories with documentation, and lots of resources. Logging, textFinder, blockingQueue, threadPool, comm, fileSystem, errorHandling, modelling and design patterns.
This page gives brief, visual reference for the most common commands in git. Once you know a bit about how git works, this site may solidify your understanding.
Here are a few things you should know about complex systems, result of a worldwide collaborative effort from leading experts, practitioners and students in the field.
The documentation system outlined here is a simple, comprehensive and nearly universally-applicable scheme. It is proven in practice across a wide variety of fields and applications.
Modern JavaScript Tutorial: simple, but detailed explanations with examples and tasks, including: closures, document and events, object oriented programming and more.
SHA-2 (Secure Hash Algorithm 2), of which SHA-256 is a part, is one of the most popular hashing algorithms out there. In this article, we are going to break down each step of the algorithm as simple as we can and work through a real-life example by hand.
The MDN Web Docs Learning Area teaches fundamentals of modern web development, beginning with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript essentials. In feedback this year, readers asked for a more opinionated, structured ...
[I]nstead of focusing on one or two concepts, I'll try to go through as many Rust snippets as I can, and explain what the keywords and symbols they contain mean.
GraphQL Start is a pragmatic guide that explains how to build a GraphQL API (server) from start to finish on top of Node.js stack using JavaScript and GraphQL.js library.
My Functional Programming journey was filled with dead ends, false starts, failed attempts and frustration. And I suspect that I’m not alone in this struggle. So why is this a common problem…
React Hooks API is officially released in React 16.8.In this post, we focus especially on useReducer by introducing various use cases. Before continuing reading this tutorial, please read the…
Application that will help you learn React fundamentals. Install this application locally - there's tutorial, code snippets and exercises. The main objective of this project is to help you get off the ground with React! - tyroprogrammer/learn-react-app
Purely functional code makes some things easier to understand: because values don't change, you can call functions and know that only their return value matters—they don't change anything outside themselves. But this makes many real-world applications difficult: how do you write to a database, or to the screen? In this screencast we look at one method for crossing this divide.
When you build real world applications, you are not always on the "happy path". You must deal with validation, logging, network and service errors, and other annoyances. How do you manage all this within a functional paradigm, when you can't use exceptions, or do early returns, and when you have no stateful data?
Open source "won" in a pre-Twitter, pre-GitHub, pre-Stack Overflow era. Today, building software in public means dealing with people (often, strangers) at le...