@TannerChrishop
Aspiring web developer
Nothing here yet.
Nothing here yet.
No blogs yet.
Bootstrap is great when you want to make something fast, at the expense of it not having a very unique design, but it will still look professional. A lot of people just go to bootstraps website and just copy and paste things into their html. It's super convenient, but I would be reluctant to call that programming or even design. You gotta know css.
I feel like basic html and css can get you pretty far. You don't get stuck on html and css issues the same way you do with javascript. A quick google search will almost always help you figure out exactly what you want. But having said that, I would still spend more time learning them. If you've invested the time to master React js and javascript, html and css will come easy. It's like being a great storyteller but not wanting to write a book because you're slow at typing. I find git way harder than html and css but it's basically something you have to learn if you're serious.
It's great how he puts off explaining the setup since getting started is pretty complicated and not exactly inviting. https://twitter.com/thomasfuchs/status/708675139253174273/photo/1?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fmedium.com%2Fmedia%2Ffe86bc82ea00d10d0b8ab1ddca72af98%3FpostId%3Da12e1833fdc
I've been trying to teach myself front end web development with mostly javascript full time since September. I've used node.js a bit and I want to dive deeper into it as well as contribute to some open source projects and start learning a framework. It would be nice to get a job or internship in this field soon but I'm in it for the long haul regardless.