If it works for you then it works for you! With that said, I personally found other resources to be useful: (Course) theodinproject.com (Course) mooc.fi Java Programming 1 & 2 (YouTube Channels) Bro Code, Caleb Curry, Programming with Mosh, Traversy Media (Book) Starting out with Programming Logic & Design (Courses - PAID) codewithmosh.com (Website) roadmap.sh Answer from Deleted User on reddit.com
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › i'm getting frustrated with codecademy
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: I'm getting frustrated with CodeCademy
October 7, 2024 -

I started the full stack course two months ago. I went through HTML, CSS and mostly JS until I reached the part where they suddenly want you do to many projects back to back. Cool, I thought at first. But all of these thing rerquire stuff, they never included before.

I once fiddled for 2 hours just to get frustrated, looking this thing up on yt and see: DAMN, they are using getDate, complex calculations and complex strings. I have never heard of this before, nor did I used it.

There is not a single step in the course I did not do. And once per week I sit down to do things again, were I got stuck. So no way I just missed that. Is this just 3 rare cases after another, or is this how they expect me to learn that stuff?

Why would I need their course if they expect me to magically think off some other ways even though I never learned of them?

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › what is so bad about codecademy?
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: What is so bad about Codecademy?
October 11, 2024 -

I’ve been trying to learn programming for a while. I was finding that most free resources were extremely difficult in getting the bigger pictures across and how things tied together. I finally broke down and bought the pro version of Codecademy. I started the backend engineering track and I feel like I’m actually learning a lot and making progress, understanding concepts. I feel like it gives me direction and ties concepts together on how things function together. The supplemental resources that they point you to help a lot.

I see Codecademy get a lot of hate on here and the majority of the reason is it’s too expensive, but I don’t really hear a lot about the content quality here.

Am I wasting my time with Codecademy, or is the pro version a start?

Top answer
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If it works for you then it works for you! With that said, I personally found other resources to be useful: (Course) theodinproject.com (Course) mooc.fi Java Programming 1 & 2 (YouTube Channels) Bro Code, Caleb Curry, Programming with Mosh, Traversy Media (Book) Starting out with Programming Logic & Design (Courses - PAID) codewithmosh.com (Website) roadmap.sh
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Every person is different. Most of the advice in here (on the FAQ to the right) is geared to brand-new people who can get much of what Codecademy offers for free elsewhere on the net. For example, you learned JS at Codecademy but you might have learned it better, faster and in more depth if you have learned it directly from Mozilla. And if you learn it at Mozilla while using a Firefox browser, they practically pay you, almost. But anyway, based on your post history you're already an industrial programmer programming logic boards for androids or whatever, and so you already have a technical mindset and just need to know the actual syntax of C#, Python, Java, JS, and so forth. So for you, you happened upon Codecademy and now it's all coming together for you. This isn't going to help some 16 or 17 year old kid who wants to make games coming to r/learnprogramming for the first time, as he or she might be better of going directly to https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/training/paths/get-started-c-sharp-part-1/ than paying for Codecademy. TL:DR: it's great that it's helping you, but you have 3 degrees and a tech mindset; you need to accept that your experience is anomalous to the brand-new 15 year olds coming here hating on Codecademy. And obviously having a salary with disposable income, you can't compare yourself to teenagers with no money.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnpython › is codecademy worthless for learning python?
r/learnpython on Reddit: Is Codecademy worthless for learning Python?
December 2, 2023 -

I started the Python course a few days ago and so far I've reached up to like functions, this is where I'm at: https://imgur.com/a/Or9qsa5

But so far it's been really easy and I feel like it's not trying hard enough to test your skills in what you just learned. Unless that's just me, I have some background in C#, C++, and even Python before, but I consider myself a Novice.

My free trial ends in the upcoming days, should I renew it to finish the course or are there other free alternative ways, or even paid platforms, that will make me think more critically about tasks.

Look forward to all your opinions.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › is codecademy worth the money and time?
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: Is Codecademy worth the money and time?
May 30, 2023 -

I recently discovered CodeCademy and they have everything from free basic fundamental skills to full fundamentals of a skill like HTML, SQ, Python etc. they also have career paths that teach you everything to do with Front end, computer science/data science, full stack. My question is, is it worth the time to do the course to getting a job as a self taught programmer? Will I be taken seriously as someone without a college degree?

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › is codeacademy pro worth it?
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: Is Codeacademy Pro worth it?
October 17, 2023 -

They've got a 50% october sale at the moment. The pro package provides access to (and I quote):

Real-world projects

All courses

Skill paths

Career paths

Technical interview prep

Code challenges

Professional certifications

Career services

Assessments

I am a not a beginner but not quite at an intermediate level. I have a decent mathematical background with some previous, limited experience in Python and C++. I'm looking to learn some Python (and C++ eventually) for applications in data analysis, ML and financial tools.

Has anyone genuinely found Codeacadmey to be a strong resource in terms of the courses and projects offered? Have you completed courses and left with a more robust understanding of concepts? Also, do employers rate their proffesional certs?

thanks for reading :)

Find elsewhere
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › are websites like codecademy and brilliant legit?
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: Are websites like Codecademy and Brilliant Legit?
December 8, 2020 -

I have an on-and-off relationship with programming / compsci.

I have attempted many times to use books and Coursera / EdX MOOCs in order to learn. But I always get stuck on some issue and cannot find proper guidance anywhere as to how to fix it. I hate searching through Google for hours trying to learn something. There are also just straight up too many choices of MOOCs to try and I have spent a long time bouncing around thinking 'this will be the one that I learn from,' and I still get stuck.

I'm willing to pay for services like Codecademy or Brilliant for the convenience of having a structured plan that actually checks whether your code is correct. But first, I want to hear from people whether these are actually any good in terms of the DEPTH of learning that you get out of them. I want to understand how my code works not just how to write it.

If not, does anyone have a recommendation for a service or website to get a structured plan to improve? I would like to learn as much as possible through exercises or projects, rather than videos.

Thank you

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › many are against codecademy because it’s too basic, but isn’t that a good thing for those starting out?
Many are against Codecademy because it’s too basic, but isn’t that a good thing for those starting out? : r/learnprogramming
March 30, 2021 - Codecademy is good but for me it just slowed down my learning. Learning with codecademy the concepts didn’t stick and took me longer to understand because of how much handholding there is. I’ve learnt very quickly the best and fastest way to learn code is by practise and application and ...
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › is codecademy good for advancing my skills?
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: Is codecademy good for advancing my skills?
March 25, 2024 -

I did the CS50 python course and I have been working on personal projects over the past year or so, but i still feel like im a beginner at python. I saw some intermediate and advanced courses for python on codecademy and I just wanted to know if anyone has experience with codecademy especially with theur intermediate and harder courses and if they are any good

Edit: thanks for the feedback guys! I will focus on projects more and check out what udemy can teach me in terms of more advanced python

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Reddit
reddit.com › r › learnprogramming › comments › xz3niw › am_i_wasting_my_time_with_codecademy
Am I wasting my time with Codecademy?
April 28, 2022 - I found codecademy and I have been going through their python courses. I enjoy their structure of classes, but I understand that their native ide doesn't give me experience with things like pycharm, and so far I am not getting exposure to git and GitHub.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/codecademy › is codecademy worth it? i'm worried i'll be wasting my time.
r/Codecademy on Reddit: Is Codecademy worth it? I'm worried I'll be wasting my time.
April 28, 2025 -

I'm going to community college in the fall for Computer Science, I graduated high school in 2023 so I just work now, and I'm finally going back. Doing the 2 years in community college then 2 years state school path.

I can get the student discount for codecademy $150 for a year of pro, but I'm worried it might be a waste? I completed the beginner python course for my senior project and I liked it a lot. And I have severe ADHD and hate learning how to code, it's not hard to understand just to learn and pay attention, and codecademy wasn't that bad to work with in that regard.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnpython › can't remember anything from codecademy.
r/learnpython on Reddit: Can't remember anything from codecademy.
April 28, 2019 -

I'm going through Codecademy's Python 3 course (pro with exercises, projects etc) and I've diligently gone through syntax control flow functions lists and now i'm at the end of loops on the coding challenges and It seems like i'm not able to complete any of the tasks without looking at the solution. I haven't retained anything from the last lesson ( at least not at a functional level) and i'm not sure what to do from here. Is there a book or some other resource that will explain step by step what's actually going on in a way that I can retain the information i'm learning and practice skills? I'd appreciate anything you can tell me, feeling very discouraged.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › thoughts on codecademy?
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: Thoughts on Codecademy?
July 13, 2021 -

So there's this pretty well-known and renowned website called Codecademy. I'm currently taking their free Java course and I don't find it to be that great. It's pretty hard to understand and the course isn't structured that well in my opinion(though I have very slight experience with Java). I'm thinking of switching to a different source but I want to know if it's just me or if it's the website/course itself?

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Reddit
reddit.com › r › learnprogramming › comments › qqh1s0 › codecademy_review_for_beginnerish
r/learnprogramming - Codecademy review for beginnerish
May 27, 2018 -

Hi, I know how to code in Java, well I know the syntax, the variables, etc. Thing is I have difficulty of "thinking" as a programmer. I know how If-else, switch, fors work, but say I have a game using all the stuff I just mentioned, I'm not able to build that game. So I feel like it's that key that is missing in my knowledge and I was wondering does Codecademy help me with that?

I appreciate all your suggestions.

Thank you