Videos
Which has more courses, Codecademy or Udemy?
How is this Coursera vs Codecademy comparison tool used?
Which features should I take into account while doing this Coursera vs Codecademy comparison?
Hi there, please point me in the right direction if this info already exists.
YEARS AGO, I tried both Codecademy and Coursera for learning some new programming skills (initially Codecademy for Python and JavaScript, then Coursera for broader backend development techniques). I put them down for several years through a couple job changes and am now curious about peopleโs current experiences.
Which is better or recommended for what? Or are there alternatives?
For context, I work in a threat hunting / threat detection development space but am also curious about machine learning, LLMs, and general secure app development and frameworks.
Gonna start learning code, been learning python on codecademy but I want to learn language(s) in-depth, something I don't get with codecademy. I don't mind if the course is paid, I just want it to keep me engaged, and one that is in-depth. Please also specify the format of the courses (video, text, both etc), and which one you found to be effective. Thanks.
I've been codecademy for a total of maybe like a month or two but feel like I make very little progress and the only practice I get is restarting the course over multiple times since I have a free account. I've been meaning to upgrade to a paid subscription just for the practice lessons but it seems pricey and left me looking for other alternatives like udemy. While I hear good things about udemy it seems like I'm paying for one class at a time and while I weighed the pros and cons I still feel like I still wanna give it a go especially now since they're doing a sale right which seems like a steal for the prices of the courses I wanna learn (java, javascript, python, rust, etc.) and I get paid this week so I may be able to make a few purchases for the courses. Should I bite the bullet and stay with codecademy despite the amount of good things I do hear about it being very few or would it be worth it to move over to udemy? Appreciate any kind of soft/harsh criticism that comes from answers, I just want something else to throw in with the youtube channels I'm subscribed to in order to learn more about coding and being a programmer.
Youtube channels I'm subscribed to:
Tech with tim
mCoding
Real Python
Telusko
ArjanCodes
Corey Schafer
freeCodeCamp.org
CS Dojo
Clever Programmer
Sentdex
Masahiro Sakurai On Creating Games
Hi everyone,
I've been learning Python across both Codecademy and Codeschool for about a week now and I'm trying to decide if I want to upgrade and pay for more courses.
Codecademy doesn't feel interactive enough for me personally.
Codeschool is awesome but it's $30 a month and I believe that's in USD but I live in New Zealand so it'll be close to $50 for me.
Then there's Udemy which claims to have a sale going on where I can get almost any course for only $10.99 but I'm hesitant as I've never tried it.
Any advice, thoughts, suggestion on which route I should go?
Thanks very much :)
Cheers
I would 100% recommend edx. It's a site that has online courses supplied by companies and colleges like Microsoft and MIT (I'm doing python courses through both of them). You get all the learning benefit without the credit/degree. It's very well structured and it's helped me SO much! Let me know and I can link you the courses. Can't recommend it enough.
Edit: I forgot, it's totally free too!
We have a pretty long list of learning resources in the wiki. Try a few and see what resonates.
Be careful with udemy ... many of their "courses" are just free youtube videos that someone stole and is charging for. Only buy if you have solid recommendations for that specific course. I've never tried it but the general consensus seems to be that udemy is only worth it if you plan on bugging the instructor (a good instructor will be thrilled to help). Otherwise there are just as good videos available for free.
It can't get more interactive than right here! Dream up a simple goal and if / when you get stuck, ask the r/learnpython community. You can even buy reddit gold if you feel bad about taking free advice.