Replying to @iamsegunajibola
Hahaha I like that answer it's honest! Good for you. I really used to love CSS. I don't develop for websites anymore I do use code samples in books articles talks that sort of thing. Not a fan of Frameworks but here they are I would prefer people use them after learning vanilla
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Yeah, that's it. To be really honest, nothing beats knowing how to use vanilla really well. Tailwind just saving my shame. It's cool for me.
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You are seriously making me giggle that's very funny I like the honesty. And I agree if you're going to use a CSS framework, preprocessor or mixin approach knowing actual CSS beforehand is really a far better way to learn and do great work.
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100% the truth. I understood the basics of CSS real well, and that's why Tailwind got easier for me.
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When you studied CSS proper did you use specifications, books what were the resources and how did you learn? I'm interested in knowing as an educator. Did you go full on Cascade and details of the language structure. What about HTML same question in terms of how you learned?
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Finished reading the W3schools docs. Googled other stuff. Ofcourse, there's YouTube for specific learning on grid, flex and others.
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It's been awhile since I've checked the status of the quality of debits the three schools it seemed better last I looked but it has been notoriously problematic historically. YouTube videos can go either way as well sometimes you get a really good educator others not so much.
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Yeah, resources quality differs and what works for people differs too.
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That's very true because people do learn differently some people love hands on some people like to talk about it some people need one-on-one tutoring style Some people prefer data visualizations, videos Etc I noticed you had quite a lot of recommendations thank you for that
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Thanks, glad you shared your opinion.
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Replying to @iamsegunajibola
Well you know how it is we coderz and Geeks love talking code and geekery don't we

Apr 24, 2022 · 4:41 PM UTC

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