Forwarded from Learn JavaScript™
Today it looks like Udemy is again discounted to ₹455/ $14.99 for all Courses. Maybe it coincides with today's 11.11 event, so there will be a discount class. One of the recommended classes at this event is the newly released class from Maximillian and Academind, with very complete material, more complete than Bootcamp. This class is named "
1. Maximilian Schwarzmüller
2. Colt Steele
3. Angela Yu
4. Jonas Schmedtmann
5. Stephen Grider
6. Brad Traversy
7. The Net Ninja (Shaun Pelling)
8. Andrei Neagoie
9. Andrew Mead
#course #udemy #Discount
100 Days Of Code - Web Development Bootcamp [2022]
" The Udemy class mentors that I think are recommended and worth checking their classes are: 1. Maximilian Schwarzmüller
2. Colt Steele
3. Angela Yu
4. Jonas Schmedtmann
5. Stephen Grider
6. Brad Traversy
7. The Net Ninja (Shaun Pelling)
8. Andrei Neagoie
9. Andrew Mead
#course #udemy #Discount
Create a water drop effect on the menu bar with CSS and JavaScript
https://dev.to/romaopedro199/tap-bar-with-liquid-animation-using-css-and-javascript-2l99
---
Create a simple image slider with HTML, CSS and JavaScript
https://dev.to/shantanu_jana/how-to-create-an-image-slider-using-html-css-and-javascript-mo0
#animation #slider #menu #bar
https://dev.to/romaopedro199/tap-bar-with-liquid-animation-using-css-and-javascript-2l99
---
Create a simple image slider with HTML, CSS and JavaScript
https://dev.to/shantanu_jana/how-to-create-an-image-slider-using-html-css-and-javascript-mo0
#animation #slider #menu #bar
Long practice on using Rebase on Git repositories
https://css-tricks.com/interactive-rebase-clean-up-your-commit-history/
#git #rebase #interactive
https://css-tricks.com/interactive-rebase-clean-up-your-commit-history/
#git #rebase #interactive
Forwarded from Programming World👨💻
Expanding Google Summer of Code in 2022
Now it's open for everyone🥳
https://opensource.googleblog.com/2021/11/expanding-google-summer-of-code-in-2022.html?m=1
Now it's open for everyone🥳
https://opensource.googleblog.com/2021/11/expanding-google-summer-of-code-in-2022.html?m=1
Long practice on introduction to CSS Grid for HTML page layout
https://dev.to/daaahailey/grid-practice-14ac
#cssGrid #css #layout
https://dev.to/daaahailey/grid-practice-14ac
#cssGrid #css #layout
introduction to CSS Grid with simple concepts
https://dev.to/ansub/css-grids-simplified-2m9f
#css #grid
https://dev.to/ansub/css-grids-simplified-2m9f
#css #grid
Forwarded from Cyber Punk™
Finding Any Ebook Using Index Search (Hidden Trick)
Basically use this in google (ugh, gonna get some hate for saying that ain’t I?)
-inurl:htm -inurl:html intitle:"index of" +("/ebooks"|"/book") +(chm|pdf|zip) +"BookName"
Replace BookName with the title of the ebook, you’ll find FTP servers hosting said file, should get a hit in the first site or two.
EXAMPLE:
-inurl:htm -inurl:html intitle:“index of” +("/ebooks"|"/book") +(chm|pdf|zip) +" *Scary stories* "
You get any format or file by changing ‘‘epub’’ to mobi, pdf, and all other extensions that available for book, See below, replace the * epub * with extension you need.
-inurl:htm -inurl:html intitle:“index of” +("/ebooks"|"/book") +(chm|pdf|zip| *epub* ) +"Scary stories"
#Collected
Basically use this in google (ugh, gonna get some hate for saying that ain’t I?)
-inurl:htm -inurl:html intitle:"index of" +("/ebooks"|"/book") +(chm|pdf|zip) +"BookName"
Replace BookName with the title of the ebook, you’ll find FTP servers hosting said file, should get a hit in the first site or two.
EXAMPLE:
-inurl:htm -inurl:html intitle:“index of” +("/ebooks"|"/book") +(chm|pdf|zip) +" *Scary stories* "
You get any format or file by changing ‘‘epub’’ to mobi, pdf, and all other extensions that available for book, See below, replace the * epub * with extension you need.
-inurl:htm -inurl:html intitle:“index of” +("/ebooks"|"/book") +(chm|pdf|zip| *epub* ) +"Scary stories"
#Collected
Forwarded from Programming World👨💻
JavaScript Features critical to understand
https://mega.nz/folder/wQ1lyQab#iJ7pacvWt5oYKFUcBtjz3A/folder/JRcHSCjY
Udemy - Spring boot Microservices
https://mega.nz/folder/z5MghYZQ#OJXC1YdmnRG5xgS_jmkHLA
Udemy - Programming for kids
https://mega.nz/folder/f5NRjKjA#nQqEpOka_VJ7XnCKPxWv7g
Udemy - Visual Studio code
https://mega.nz/folder/lVVH0S5Z#WFhaKyETBuz4tTp9ltzIdg
Udemy - Web development
https://mega.nz/folder/qx5QQILR#ZBaTPewL9wrR_M0QSJZZYg
Udemy - Php
https://mega.nz/folder/208kkKIB#TOyaWtNPs5nLv8ECBBoWqw
Udemy - Angular 8
https://mega.nz/folder/LoIUkArT#4KoPer_i1KZs-uJug8yvqw
Udemy - Learn about python
https://mega.nz/folder/RRFEyIYB#jRVC4FK87WmvtEbgSsSp5g
https://mega.nz/folder/wQ1lyQab#iJ7pacvWt5oYKFUcBtjz3A/folder/JRcHSCjY
Udemy - Spring boot Microservices
https://mega.nz/folder/z5MghYZQ#OJXC1YdmnRG5xgS_jmkHLA
Udemy - Programming for kids
https://mega.nz/folder/f5NRjKjA#nQqEpOka_VJ7XnCKPxWv7g
Udemy - Visual Studio code
https://mega.nz/folder/lVVH0S5Z#WFhaKyETBuz4tTp9ltzIdg
Udemy - Web development
https://mega.nz/folder/qx5QQILR#ZBaTPewL9wrR_M0QSJZZYg
Udemy - Php
https://mega.nz/folder/208kkKIB#TOyaWtNPs5nLv8ECBBoWqw
Udemy - Angular 8
https://mega.nz/folder/LoIUkArT#4KoPer_i1KZs-uJug8yvqw
Udemy - Learn about python
https://mega.nz/folder/RRFEyIYB#jRVC4FK87WmvtEbgSsSp5g
Creating landing pages like Starbucks coffeeshop, with HTML and CSS by Traversy Media
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_n2FGNsm0o
#css #traversymedia
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_n2FGNsm0o
#css #traversymedia
Forwarded from Cyber Punk™
If you're 47 or younger, you're a time billionaire.
Are you using that time wisely?
IMPORTANT , READ WISELY
1 billion seconds = 31.7 years
The average human lives about 79 years.
If you're 47 or younger, that means you're a time billionaire.
You likely have 1 billion+ seconds left in your life.
If you're 20, there's a decent chance you're a multi-time billionaire.
But almost NOBODY thinks this way.
Why is that?
It's because our society places more value on being a dollar billionaire.
We severely overvalue the dollar billionaire and undervalue the time billionaire.
This is flawed.
Warren Buffett is worth billions of dollars.
No young person in their right mind would switch lives with him if they had to be in their 90s.
Time billionaire > Dollar billionaire
Time is the most precious asset in the world.Everybody has the same amount of time each day.
You can't buy more of it.
It's the only thing in our lives that we can't reacquire once it's gone.
On average, here's how we spend it:
• Sleeping = 26 years
• Trying to fall asleep = 7 years
• Working = 13 years
• TV = 8.3 years
• Eating = 4.5 years
• Chores = 4.3 years
• Social media = 3 years
• Commuting = 3 years
• Grooming = 1.8 years
• Exercise = 1.3 years
With an average life expectancy of 79 years that leaves us with 6.8 years of free time.
What falls into this bucket?
• Reading
• Falling in love
• Going to concerts
• Holidays/Vacations
• Time with friends/family
• Giving back to the community
Only 8.6% of our lives!
How much of your 6.8 years have you already used up?
What would you do differently with your time if you cut that number in half?
Think about these questions.
Then ask yourself:
"How can I optimize my time in the other buckets?"
Stop the timepass. Work harder
Are you using that time wisely?
IMPORTANT , READ WISELY
1 billion seconds = 31.7 years
The average human lives about 79 years.
If you're 47 or younger, that means you're a time billionaire.
You likely have 1 billion+ seconds left in your life.
If you're 20, there's a decent chance you're a multi-time billionaire.
But almost NOBODY thinks this way.
Why is that?
It's because our society places more value on being a dollar billionaire.
We severely overvalue the dollar billionaire and undervalue the time billionaire.
This is flawed.
Warren Buffett is worth billions of dollars.
No young person in their right mind would switch lives with him if they had to be in their 90s.
Time billionaire > Dollar billionaire
Time is the most precious asset in the world.Everybody has the same amount of time each day.
You can't buy more of it.
It's the only thing in our lives that we can't reacquire once it's gone.
On average, here's how we spend it:
• Sleeping = 26 years
• Trying to fall asleep = 7 years
• Working = 13 years
• TV = 8.3 years
• Eating = 4.5 years
• Chores = 4.3 years
• Social media = 3 years
• Commuting = 3 years
• Grooming = 1.8 years
• Exercise = 1.3 years
With an average life expectancy of 79 years that leaves us with 6.8 years of free time.
What falls into this bucket?
• Reading
• Falling in love
• Going to concerts
• Holidays/Vacations
• Time with friends/family
• Giving back to the community
Only 8.6% of our lives!
How much of your 6.8 years have you already used up?
What would you do differently with your time if you cut that number in half?
Think about these questions.
Then ask yourself:
"How can I optimize my time in the other buckets?"
Stop the timepass. Work harder
Frosted Glass Effect in CSS
https://dev.to/khush2706/frosted-glass-effect-in-css-27p4
#webdev #css #beginners #tutorial
https://dev.to/khush2706/frosted-glass-effect-in-css-27p4
#webdev #css #beginners #tutorial
Introducing CSS Grid and Flexbox for functions and properties that few people know about by Kevin Powell
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3wHkfMz8oE
#css #flexbox #grid #kevinPowell
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3wHkfMz8oE
#css #flexbox #grid #kevinPowell
CSS Grid introduction by Kevin Powell
https://youtu.be/rg7Fvvl3taU
---
Comparison between Flexbox and CSS Grid
https://levelup.gitconnected.com/grid-vs-flexbox-battle-75f9f940502a
---
#css #grid #flexbox #kevinPowell
https://youtu.be/rg7Fvvl3taU
---
Comparison between Flexbox and CSS Grid
https://levelup.gitconnected.com/grid-vs-flexbox-battle-75f9f940502a
---
#css #grid #flexbox #kevinPowell
Codier – Front-end Coding Challenges
https://codier.io/
https://codier.io/
codier.io
Codier - Coding Challenges for Front-end Developers
Codier connects front-end developers to create, share and challenge one another. Browse the wide range of community-made coding challenges or design your own for other to solve. Codier is the perfect place to grow your front-end development skills.
Forwarded from Learn Web Development
🔺Roadmap to become Full-Stack developer in 2021🔺
🔺How The Internet Works
1. What happens when you go google
2. Introduction to Networks
3. Browser Networking
4. IP Addresses
5. HTTP/2
6. What is domain name?
7. What is hosting?
🔺Advanced Front End 🔚
1. HTML
2. CSS
3. JavaScript
4. React
🔺Operating Systems 🖥
1. Using the command line
2. What is an operating system?
3. Memory
4. Unix Programming
5. Bash-Scripting Guide
6. Thread & Concurrency
7. Process Management
8. Interprocess Communication
9. Basic Networking
10. Basic Terminal Commands
🔺Programming Languages 📕
1. Know PHP
2. Learn Ruby
3. Learn Rust
4. Learn Go
5. Know Server-Side JavaScript
6. Learn Python
7. Learn C#
8. Learn Java
Make sure you have in-depth knowledge of your favorite language
🔺Version Control
1. A Visual Git Reference
2. Visualizing Git Concepts with D3
3. Github Cheat Sheet
4. SVN
5. Repo Hosting Services
a. GitHub
b. GitLab
c. Bitbucket
🔺Relational Databases
1. Object-Relational Mapping
2. ACID
3. N+1 Problem
4. Sharding
5. CAP Theorem
6. Normalization
7. Indexes
8. Theory of Relational Databases
a. Learn MySQL
b. Learn PostgreSQL
c. Learn MariaDB
d. Learn MS SQL
🔺NoSQL Databases
1. Learn MongoDB
2. Learn CouchDB
3. NoSQL Databases
4. Graph Databases
🔺APIs
1. Working with APIs
2. REST
3. GraphQL
4. JSON-RPC
5. HATEOAS
6. Authentication
🔺Caching
1. Learn HTTP caching
2. Learn Redis
3. Learn Memcached
4. Learn Service workers
🔺Security
1. HTTPS + TLS
2. CORS
3. MD5
4. SHA-2
5. SCrypt
6. BCrypt
7. OWASP
8. Content Security Policy
🔺CI/CD
1. Testing your code
2. Jenkins
3. TravisCI
🔺Development Concepts
1. SOLID
2. KISS
3. YAGNI
4. DRY
5. Domain-Driven Design
6. Test Driven Development
7. MVC
🔺Software Architecture
1. Monolithic Apps
2. Microservices
3. Service Oriented Architecture
4. CQRS
5. Serverless
🔺Containers
1. Docker Fundamentals
2. Docker Cookbook
3. Kubernetes Cookbook
4. rkt
5. LXC
🔺Servers
1. Nginx Handbook
2. Apache
3. Caddy
🔺Scalability
1. Distributed Systems
2. System Design Primer
3. Real-World Maintainable Software
4. The 12 Factor App
5. Architecting Frontend Projects To Scale
🔺How The Internet Works
1. What happens when you go google
2. Introduction to Networks
3. Browser Networking
4. IP Addresses
5. HTTP/2
6. What is domain name?
7. What is hosting?
🔺Advanced Front End 🔚
1. HTML
2. CSS
3. JavaScript
4. React
🔺Operating Systems 🖥
1. Using the command line
2. What is an operating system?
3. Memory
4. Unix Programming
5. Bash-Scripting Guide
6. Thread & Concurrency
7. Process Management
8. Interprocess Communication
9. Basic Networking
10. Basic Terminal Commands
🔺Programming Languages 📕
1. Know PHP
2. Learn Ruby
3. Learn Rust
4. Learn Go
5. Know Server-Side JavaScript
6. Learn Python
7. Learn C#
8. Learn Java
Make sure you have in-depth knowledge of your favorite language
🔺Version Control
1. A Visual Git Reference
2. Visualizing Git Concepts with D3
3. Github Cheat Sheet
4. SVN
5. Repo Hosting Services
a. GitHub
b. GitLab
c. Bitbucket
🔺Relational Databases
1. Object-Relational Mapping
2. ACID
3. N+1 Problem
4. Sharding
5. CAP Theorem
6. Normalization
7. Indexes
8. Theory of Relational Databases
a. Learn MySQL
b. Learn PostgreSQL
c. Learn MariaDB
d. Learn MS SQL
🔺NoSQL Databases
1. Learn MongoDB
2. Learn CouchDB
3. NoSQL Databases
4. Graph Databases
🔺APIs
1. Working with APIs
2. REST
3. GraphQL
4. JSON-RPC
5. HATEOAS
6. Authentication
🔺Caching
1. Learn HTTP caching
2. Learn Redis
3. Learn Memcached
4. Learn Service workers
🔺Security
1. HTTPS + TLS
2. CORS
3. MD5
4. SHA-2
5. SCrypt
6. BCrypt
7. OWASP
8. Content Security Policy
🔺CI/CD
1. Testing your code
2. Jenkins
3. TravisCI
🔺Development Concepts
1. SOLID
2. KISS
3. YAGNI
4. DRY
5. Domain-Driven Design
6. Test Driven Development
7. MVC
🔺Software Architecture
1. Monolithic Apps
2. Microservices
3. Service Oriented Architecture
4. CQRS
5. Serverless
🔺Containers
1. Docker Fundamentals
2. Docker Cookbook
3. Kubernetes Cookbook
4. rkt
5. LXC
🔺Servers
1. Nginx Handbook
2. Apache
3. Caddy
🔺Scalability
1. Distributed Systems
2. System Design Primer
3. Real-World Maintainable Software
4. The 12 Factor App
5. Architecting Frontend Projects To Scale
Forwarded from Learn JavaScript™
Master frontend skill by cloning these sites🎉
1. Netflix🎯
https://www.netflix.com/in/login?nextpage=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.netflix.com%2Fbrowse
When logged in Netflix is a pretty simple design. Horizontal rows, galleries, with a big featured banner.
2.Hulu🎯
https://www.hulu.com/welcome
Just like Netflix, the logged in experience in Hulu is pretty similar. Has a large featured banner, and basically rows of movies or tv shows with every few rows having a featured section.
3. Apple 🎯
https://www.apple.com/
You'll know what I mean by "big block" design. Apple does this well. It's clean, intuitive and pretty straight forward. If you break everything down into smaller components, you'll see how easy it would be to implement the design.
4. Airbnb🎯
https://www.airbnb.co.in/?locale=en&_set_bev_on_new_domain=1638253270_ZWVmZDNiNGY3OWJh
Airbnb is such a beautiful website! The assets are amazing. Break this design down into smaller components, and you'll see how it's just a bunch of big rows and small rows. Blocks either spanning multiple columns, or the entire row.
5.SpaceX🎯
https://www.spacex.com/
Super easy design. SpaceX is basically multiple fullscreen images with fade up content and a link section.
6. NVIDIA🎯
https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/
Another easy, but professional looking design. Just a banner, grid layout and rows.
7.Razer🎯
https://www.razer.com/
A mix of a large home banner, full page featured sections, and big box design. Have fun with this sick color scheme!
8.Salesforce🎯
https://www.salesforce.com/in/?ir=1
Another great website to polish your css skills. A mix of banners, rows, columns, reverse columns, big box design, but also has featured list, multiple call to actions, and fun images.
9. Adobe🎯
https://www.adobe.com/
Another big box design. But also features some cool background gradients.
10. Microsoft🎯
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/
Features a modal, big banners, multiple featured sections, big call to action. Pretty straight forward, but professional looking design.
11. Blockchain🎯
https://www.blockchain.com/
Learn about blockchain while you clone this one. This design incorporates a few more difficult design concepts. It also features a big banner, call to actions, gradient effects, but also has big box designs as links and dynamic accordions. So not only does the accordion tab drop more content below it, it changes the image beside it! You probably have a tool of choice for this 🤔
12. Paypal🎯
https://www.paypal.com/us/home
Features a big banner, call to action, and reverse rows. Straight forward, but effective design.
13. Slack 🎯
https://slack.com/intl/en-in/
Slack features a fun homepage banner. In the banner is a toast banner, a call to action, a Google sign in button, and a row of icons featuring companies that use Slack. The rest of the layout is a simple grid system with a typical reverse row design. Minimal animations, like hover effects.
14. Discord🎯
https://discord.com/
Probably my favorite looking website on the list. It has fun vibrant colors, a minimalistic homepage banner featuring a call to action, reverse row grid layout and a nice big featured section.
15. Amazon🎯
https://www.amazon.com/
The king of e-commerce. This is a straight up "show off" mockup. If you can nail Amazons design, your frontend dev design skills are up to industry standard. Features a slightly more complex grid layout, with content spanning one or more rows and columns. Has a search bar in the navigation. Also has recommended section, hover effects, carousels, etc. Have fun with this behemoth!
16. PlayStation🎯
https://www.playstation.com/en-us/
Playstation. com has a nice large homepage banner featuring a slide show with a nice fade in effect. You can code this from scratch, or use your favorite library.
1. Netflix🎯
https://www.netflix.com/in/login?nextpage=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.netflix.com%2Fbrowse
When logged in Netflix is a pretty simple design. Horizontal rows, galleries, with a big featured banner.
2.Hulu🎯
https://www.hulu.com/welcome
Just like Netflix, the logged in experience in Hulu is pretty similar. Has a large featured banner, and basically rows of movies or tv shows with every few rows having a featured section.
3. Apple 🎯
https://www.apple.com/
You'll know what I mean by "big block" design. Apple does this well. It's clean, intuitive and pretty straight forward. If you break everything down into smaller components, you'll see how easy it would be to implement the design.
4. Airbnb🎯
https://www.airbnb.co.in/?locale=en&_set_bev_on_new_domain=1638253270_ZWVmZDNiNGY3OWJh
Airbnb is such a beautiful website! The assets are amazing. Break this design down into smaller components, and you'll see how it's just a bunch of big rows and small rows. Blocks either spanning multiple columns, or the entire row.
5.SpaceX🎯
https://www.spacex.com/
Super easy design. SpaceX is basically multiple fullscreen images with fade up content and a link section.
6. NVIDIA🎯
https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/
Another easy, but professional looking design. Just a banner, grid layout and rows.
7.Razer🎯
https://www.razer.com/
A mix of a large home banner, full page featured sections, and big box design. Have fun with this sick color scheme!
8.Salesforce🎯
https://www.salesforce.com/in/?ir=1
Another great website to polish your css skills. A mix of banners, rows, columns, reverse columns, big box design, but also has featured list, multiple call to actions, and fun images.
9. Adobe🎯
https://www.adobe.com/
Another big box design. But also features some cool background gradients.
10. Microsoft🎯
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/
Features a modal, big banners, multiple featured sections, big call to action. Pretty straight forward, but professional looking design.
11. Blockchain🎯
https://www.blockchain.com/
Learn about blockchain while you clone this one. This design incorporates a few more difficult design concepts. It also features a big banner, call to actions, gradient effects, but also has big box designs as links and dynamic accordions. So not only does the accordion tab drop more content below it, it changes the image beside it! You probably have a tool of choice for this 🤔
12. Paypal🎯
https://www.paypal.com/us/home
Features a big banner, call to action, and reverse rows. Straight forward, but effective design.
13. Slack 🎯
https://slack.com/intl/en-in/
Slack features a fun homepage banner. In the banner is a toast banner, a call to action, a Google sign in button, and a row of icons featuring companies that use Slack. The rest of the layout is a simple grid system with a typical reverse row design. Minimal animations, like hover effects.
14. Discord🎯
https://discord.com/
Probably my favorite looking website on the list. It has fun vibrant colors, a minimalistic homepage banner featuring a call to action, reverse row grid layout and a nice big featured section.
15. Amazon🎯
https://www.amazon.com/
The king of e-commerce. This is a straight up "show off" mockup. If you can nail Amazons design, your frontend dev design skills are up to industry standard. Features a slightly more complex grid layout, with content spanning one or more rows and columns. Has a search bar in the navigation. Also has recommended section, hover effects, carousels, etc. Have fun with this behemoth!
16. PlayStation🎯
https://www.playstation.com/en-us/
Playstation. com has a nice large homepage banner featuring a slide show with a nice fade in effect. You can code this from scratch, or use your favorite library.
A complete guide on several ways to center HTML elements with CSS
https://blog.logrocket.com/bidirectional-css-centering-complete-guide/
#css #center #element
https://blog.logrocket.com/bidirectional-css-centering-complete-guide/
#css #center #element
LogRocket Blog
Bidirectional CSS centering: A complete guide - LogRocket Blog
Learn modern bidirectional CSS centering techniques with best practices to center objects that scale across devices and screens.
Forwarded from Learn Web Development
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Web 1.0-beta
Everybody be talking about Web 2.0 vs Web 3.0. But what about Web 1.0-beta?
Try the original web experience: https://worldwideweb.cern.ch/
Credits: Fireship
#shorts #webdev #compsci
Everybody be talking about Web 2.0 vs Web 3.0. But what about Web 1.0-beta?
Try the original web experience: https://worldwideweb.cern.ch/
Credits: Fireship
#shorts #webdev #compsci