Top best website Every Programmer and Internet Users Should Visit On Daily… Just try below link friends…
There's unusual site I read: slideshare.net. I search for the keywords I care about (Python, React, Node, JavaScript) for presentations in the last seven days. It provides information in a dense form, rather than just entertainment. There might be five new presentations on Node in a week, takes about two minutes to look through, and usually has insight.
1) Hashnode.com
2) Stackoverflow.com (Sections: Web Applications, Server Fault, Webmasters, etc)
3) Pluralsight.com
4) MSDN (I.e., channel9.msdn.com)
5) Reddit.com (mostly /web_dev and frontpage)
6) Htmlreference.io & Cssreference.io
7) Twitter.com (Catch numerous individual thought-leader posts)
8) Youtube.com (Subbed channels or I go down rabbit hole of related videos)
9) C-SharpCorner.com
10) Forums.Asp.net
Nice question. So i am a self-taught developer and all these awesome webpages out there helped me really a lot. There are so many treasures online so there is no excuse if we really want to evolve and thrive.
When i started i couldn't afford paying some memberships so i was using only free ones like:
After a couple of years i realized that i should invest more in my personal development / knowledge since i could afford it. In general i always say to myself how do you expect others to pay for your skills if you are not really determined to make them sharp? I did it and it paid me off by far.
Some webpages i have active membership:
So i have a studying pattern and every morning while drinking my 1st coffee and every night after i put my kids to bed i study at least 1 article or watch a couple of tutorials.
I try a lot also to be an active member across some webpages that offer social networking. I found out that these webpages keep me updated for latest news and technologies and i can have real-time conversations with some gurus out there. These are:
I remember myself sending a tweet wondering about ReactJS event handlers and stateless components because i have read almost everywhere that this kills performance. I always search for best practices and patterns so this was in my alert-list. Some minutes later Dan Abramov himself answered and clarified the whole thing:
This is so cool right. Really fast learning!!!
Sometimes i find myself searching for hours on github.com reading other people code and checking under the hood for best practices and patterns. Most of the times i prefer studying real code let's say about Redux for example than reading an article. Everything starts clicking in a matter of seconds by doing so and i don't have to do stupid memorization since i know exactly how it works this or that.
Last but not least, i think the best way to learn something is to write a short article on your own and try to teach other people. There are awesome online platforms with great communities where you can share your ideas:
You 'll be amazed how much this is going to benefit you.
So that's it. Happy learning and thanks for reading!!!!
DevDocs - For Documentation
GitHub - For opensource
StackOverFlow - to find ways on how to do
Medium - Reading dev stories
and finally!!!
#node - my pinned tab in chrome
Apart from website mentioned above, I do also visit:
MSDN
MSDN
MSDN
MSDN
MSDN
Hashnode
Stack Exchange
Handmade network
GitHub
YouTube
1- Google
2- Basecamp
3- Hashnode
4- Github
5- Stackoverflow
6- facebook
7- Codepen
8- localhost:3000
Over the year, here are the top websites that i visit very frequently..
stackoverflow.com - for the code that doesn't work.
github.com - source code repository, list of open projects to help my code.
spring.io - to get references to java(Spring framwork), docs and guides.
dzone.com - so many blogs, many things to read and increase your knowledge.
journaldev.com - specially for java, there is so many tutorials that can help you understand core concepts of java and different frameworks.
sitepoint.com - great resource about ideas, tip and article.
scotch.io - (has well written article) for me it is great place to find dummy projects. which i can change further.
hackerrank.com - coding practice and challenges.
techgig.com - technical challenges, quiz, practice and you may also earn money if you win any challange.
hashnode.com - to share knowledge with each other around the world.
There is many more websites but the first came into my mind is here.
Vasan Subramanian
Previous generation techie
Shubham Sharma
Astro TemplePooja
i found a amazing Facebook video downloader