I have years experience in marketing so I'm looking to get a Web Development certificate to make me competitive. I don't know anything about Web Development/Coding, so is this route best? Is Web Development very hard?
PoppaGeorge Member since Nov 07th 2004 10384 posts
Mon Feb-02-15 02:45 PM
1. "sidenote: I was at the library yesterday with the family..." In response to Reply # 0
... and we were in the kids section. Asian father and son sittin off on their laptops, kid was about 7 or 8 years old. We were walking past and glanced over at the kid's laptop...
... He was taking an HTML coding test.
If he was older than 8 I would be surprised.
He's gonna be your boss in a few years.
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Like there is stupid, and then there is you, and then there is dead. - VAsBestBBW
Atillah Moor Member since Sep 05th 2013 13825 posts
Mon Feb-02-15 02:47 PM
2. "depends on how bad you want it" In response to Reply # 0
It's hard if you don't follow logic or have a hard time committing structural elements or concepts i.e. syntax to memory. I'd say in general that if language learning is difficult or not interesting to you than web development would probably be more of a challenge.
I say that because you will be doing a lot of programming/scipting and will need to know several languages. Javascript for sure, some back end language like PHP, and likely some degree of SQL. In my experience I've found it somewhat similar to learning spoken languages.
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Everything looks like Oprah kissing Harvey Weinstein these days
4. "This is going to be your biggest obstacle" In response to Reply # 0
>I don't know anything about Web Development/Coding
You should try coding some stuff to see if you like it. Start with basic HTML/CSS/Javascript. I code for fun and have been doing so since I was 12, so it's fairly easy to pick up new programming languages/concepts because it's enjoyable to me.
8. "You might be better off learning an open source framework. " In response to Reply # 0
Get a handle on wordpress, cop a theme/plugin bundle or two(WooThemes, WPDEV, etc) and enough HTML 5, CSS, and PHP to competently customize them and you could probably do fairly well.
12. "definitely do NOT pay for a certificate" In response to Reply # 0
anywhere worth working for won't care about a certificate. you'll have to be knowledgeable enough about coding to sound competent in an interview. and that just takes experience.
there's an unlimited amount of training/practice material online to learn the basics.
but just to be realistic about it, if you're looking to be a legit full-time web developer, it's probably gonna take you months of dedicated practice to even get to a intro/intern-level dev gig.
Complete the Web Development Track. It will take you through everything you need to know to create websites. I did this in my spare time and make a lot of money with the skills it taught me.