binarygalwalkin / My-Learning-Tracker

Keeping track of my web development skills and learning in one place along with resources, highlights, interests, and everything to do with my learning.

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A complete log of my web development skills, learning, resources, highlights, interests, and everything to do with my learning. It's a way to keep track, organise, and share my learning.

For my full portfolio click here || For my learning log click here


Skills

Skill 1
Introduction
2
Basics
3
Good
4
Pretty Good
5
Confident
6
Awesome
HTML5 done done done done done
CSS3 done done done done done
JavaScript done done done
ES6 done done done
React done done done
Redux done done
Backbone done done done
Git done done done done
Git bash done done done
GitHub done done done done
Bitbucket done done done done
Gulp/Webpack done done
Agile done done done
Stylus done done done
Working with APIs done done done
jQuery done done done done
Css Grid & Flex-box done done done done
Responsive design done done done done
Mobile first done done done done
Progressive Enhancement done done done done
Markdown done done done done done
Website Building done done done done
Publishing website done done done
Bootstrap done done done
Command line done done done
Node.js done done
NPM done done
Open Source Contribution done done
Angular 4 done
NPM scripts done .

Learning

Status Year Course Tutor
Completed Feb 2019 The Complete JavaScript Handbook Flavio Copes
Completed Jan 2019 JavaScript clean code guide Ryan McDermott
Completed Aug 2018 Front-End Web Developer Nanodegree Udacity - Google Scholarship
Completed Feb 2018 The Beginner's Guide to Reactjs Kent C Dodds - egghead.io
Completed Jan 2018 Google Developer Challenge Scholarship - Web Developer Udacity
Completed 2017 Workflow Tools for Web Developers Christina Truong - Lynda.com
Completed 2017 Learning Git and GitHub Ray Villalobos - Lynda.com
Completed 2017 CSS Essential Training 3 Christina Truong - Lynda.com
Completed 2017 CSS Essential Training 2 Christina Truong - Lynda.com
Completed 2017 Getting Your Website Online Christina Truong - Lynda.com
Completed 2017 Learn Enough Command Line to Be Dangerous Michael Hartl
Completed 2017 Basic Front End Development Projects Free Code Camp
Completed 2017 The Web Developer Bootcamp - Frond End Colt Steele - Udemy
In Progress Read Eloquent JavaScript Marijn Haverbeke
In Progress JavaScript and React for Developers Cassidy Williams - Udemy
In Progress Front End Development Free Code Camp
In Progress JavaScript30 Wes Bos
Soon Read JavaScript: The Good Parts Douglas Crockford
Soon Read You Don't know JavaScript Kyle Simpson

Paths

Paths with multiple resources Author
33 concepts every JavaScript developer should know Leonardo Maldonado
Best JavaScript books, tutorials, courses & videos ReactDOM
Learn to code in 2018 Andrei Neagoie
Get Job ready - JavaScript Edition P1xt
Full Stack Web Developer Path Shovan Chatterjee

Highlights

The most interesting of what I'm watching, reading, and doing:

Click here for playlists and tweets. Articles, talks, tutorials, and more

And here is a chronological log of the highlights of my learning:

My Learning Log


Interests

I'm currently interested in/excited about:

  • React
  • JavaScript best practice
  • Object Oriented Programming

Web Development Checklist

This is a list of basic objectives to meet on the road to mastering web development.

It is an almost exact copy of Ginny Fahs' "Things Real Developers Do: My Bucket List"

  • Open the computer’s terminal
  • Use a text editor (bonus points if you have a specific reason for choosing it)
  • Use some keyboard shortcuts
  • Write tests for your code
  • Help another web developer with something they’re having trouble with
  • Attend an event about web development
  • Follow developers you admire on social media
  • Read a book about coding
  • Open your browser console
  • Get data from an API
  • Hide API keys from the public
  • Post a question on Stack Overflow
  • Push code to GitHub or GitLab or BitBucket
  • Speak about something web development-related at an event
  • Complete a technical interview
  • Participate in a hackathon
  • Deploy a project
  • Ship your project to a store
  • Contribute to open source
  • Get paid to code
  • When people ask what you do, respond saying you’re a developer :)

If you find this useful for your own needs you are welcome to fork a copy, customise it or even give it a star.

You can follow me on Twitter or get in touch


Acknowledgments

This has been partly inspired by Shovan Chatterjee and his wonderful Full Stack Web Developer Path project. And of course by Alexander Kallaway's very motivational #100DaysOfCode challenge and the great and supportive community around it.

License

MIT License

About

Keeping track of my web development skills and learning in one place along with resources, highlights, interests, and everything to do with my learning.

License:MIT License


Languages

Language:HTML 84.1%Language:JavaScript 12.9%Language:CSS 3.0%