"i added them here".. im looking where here is 😂 amazing video, even as a advanced react programmer, i found this really helpful and everything said was on point
Hi. I am learning React for about a year and now I'm learning C#. Do you think is it worth it to pursue the language as a backend language? if it is not, what do you recommend to learn? And what backend language are you using if you don't mind to tell it.
Thanks for the effort! Assuming 0 knowledge of programming, are there some good Udemy (or others) courses you would recommend to go from 0 to React (plus backend) as fast as possible? I agree that long videos without practice are a waste of time... Thanks!
thanks, very usefull videos, I'm in the process of creating an app with react, mysql, sequelize, js, nodejs. hope I can learn a lot off stuff on this channel! Also if you had a patreon acc I would sub.
The way you are talknig about next js implies that it is moreso part of react, a noob could even think this a package you install to add functionality like redux or graphql or something of that nature, or that next js is just another way to create a react app like CRA or vite, whereas its totally its own thing sitting on the level of react. it functions like and is based off of react but its so different. I get what you are trying to say though. it does all the things you've mentioned already. You suggest it as a follow up on react which is great IMO, But Next js can also serve as an entry point to the entire ecosystem. I learned Nextjs first (mostly i had one react project under my belt, and i didn't understand the difference) so my second project was nextjs and I liked that a lot so I stuck with it for about a dozen projects. It was like project 6 or so before i realized next is not react, and I was not learning react, then later on realized that i was learning everything i needed to know to fully learn and understand react as well. Anyway just wanted to add some clarity for the newer ppl who will likely mistake what you said, whereas the advanced ppl will likely understand exactly what you mean.
Solid road map though. As some one just crossing into the threshold of advanced within the last few months, this is still a solid road map to go back over and refine and fine-tune my skill set. This is the list I came up with for myself to either get better at doing with no help aside from documentation or to learn more about IE more usecases or more ways of executing I know i need to work with useContext A LOT more as I have mostly been working with Next and using Zustand for state management especially global state so I got a little to cozy with that. Functional Components Props State Hooks conditional rendering maping & list useContext hooks useEffect Life Cycle Router/Dom Navigation useRef React Query Redux graphQL One thing I would add to this list I didn't hear you mention would be exploring various authentication methods. Id probably say master at least 4 ways to authenticate users of varing difficulty
i added redux to my list because I've used it once and while i do understand it I certainly could understand it a lot better. A LOT of job posting are still asking for knowledge in this, and I honestly wouldn't comfortable to talk about it in an interview I would need the docs open to even work with it right now so why not.
Language change is a good one. It likely wont come up in any interview, but most major websites have this, even most mid range sites have this too, so you are likely going to work with it in the field
hi Pedro , your videos are very helpful , tnx for sharing , i am react developer and i am ok in react and development projects . but i cant find a good job , can you help me how can i find a job?
I learned react from you bro and you were phenomenal I've being doing a lot of jobs for the passed one year and I thank you however I'm still looking for a good react native tutorial if you could recommend or even start the course I'll be glad
I would imagine so, I understand native to just be a react framework that converts react to native phone languages. I am wondering myself the opposite if it would be easy for a react/next dev to jump into native. I have been wanting to take the best projects I have and run react native apps for them all, which i feel will round out my portfolio in a solid manner.
I work for a big company and I can assure you that we are not. It is highly unlikely that companies would not use typescript since it is objectively better then JavaScript, and most of the web is written in js. Also, to stop using ts would require multiple companies migrating entire codebases, which could take years. So i can assure typescript is still very essential
"i added them here".. im looking where here is 😂 amazing video, even as a advanced react programmer, i found this really helpful and everything said was on point
Loll sorry, will show this to my editor
Hi. I am learning React for about a year and now I'm learning C#. Do you think is it worth it to pursue the language as a backend language? if it is not, what do you recommend to learn?
And what backend language are you using if you don't mind to tell it.
I think it really depends on what you are trying to build. Any language could be worth it based on that.
Much needed!
Thanks a lot bro.
I don't agree with you on the redux part. Its still essential to learn if you wanna get a job. Almost every react job has a requirement of Redux.
Very insightful video and to the point as always. Thanks Pedro!!
Thanks for the insights, and do you recommend remix?
Thanks for the effort! Assuming 0 knowledge of programming, are there some good Udemy (or others) courses you would recommend to go from 0 to React (plus backend) as fast as possible? I agree that long videos without practice are a waste of time... Thanks!
thank u so much
thanks, very usefull videos, I'm in the process of creating an app with react, mysql, sequelize, js, nodejs. hope I can learn a lot off stuff on this channel! Also if you had a patreon acc I would sub.
The way you are talknig about next js implies that it is moreso part of react, a noob could even think this a package you install to add functionality like redux or graphql or something of that nature, or that next js is just another way to create a react app like CRA or vite, whereas its totally its own thing sitting on the level of react. it functions like and is based off of react but its so different. I get what you are trying to say though. it does all the things you've mentioned already. You suggest it as a follow up on react which is great IMO, But Next js can also serve as an entry point to the entire ecosystem. I learned Nextjs first (mostly i had one react project under my belt, and i didn't understand the difference) so my second project was nextjs and I liked that a lot so I stuck with it for about a dozen projects. It was like project 6 or so before i realized next is not react, and I was not learning react, then later on realized that i was learning everything i needed to know to fully learn and understand react as well.
Anyway just wanted to add some clarity for the newer ppl who will likely mistake what you said, whereas the advanced ppl will likely understand exactly what you mean.
Thanks mate I have switched my domain from support to react developer. This video helps me a lot on finding the areas which I need to improve.
very well spoken guy, nice accent. sometimes it’s not just coding, you have to be able to speak as well and he got that.
Thank you!!
Thank you.
20 min vidéo which could be 5 min
Thank you Pedro!!
Solid road map though. As some one just crossing into the threshold of advanced within the last few months, this is still a solid road map to go back over and refine and fine-tune my skill set.
This is the list I came up with for myself to either get better at doing with no help aside from documentation or to learn more about IE more usecases or more ways of executing I know i need to work with useContext A LOT more as I have mostly been working with Next and using Zustand for state management especially global state so I got a little to cozy with that.
Functional Components
Props
State Hooks
conditional rendering
maping & list
useContext hooks
useEffect
Life Cycle
Router/Dom Navigation
useRef
React Query Redux graphQL
One thing I would add to this list I didn't hear you mention would be exploring various authentication methods. Id probably say master at least 4 ways to authenticate users of varing difficulty
i added redux to my list because I've used it once and while i do understand it I certainly could understand it a lot better. A LOT of job posting are still asking for knowledge in this, and I honestly wouldn't comfortable to talk about it in an interview I would need the docs open to even work with it right now so why not.
Language change is a good one. It likely wont come up in any interview, but most major websites have this, even most mid range sites have this too, so you are likely going to work with it in the field
hi Pedro , your videos are very helpful , tnx for sharing , i am react developer and i am ok in react and development projects . but i cant find a good job , can you help me how can i find a job?
Thanks for the video, I'm a huge fan, do you have any thing on using CMS with reactJS?
Thankss!! I don't think i have a video on it
@@PedroTechnologies can you recommend any resource that would be of help please?
is nextjs necessary ?
I learned react from you bro and you were phenomenal I've being doing a lot of jobs for the passed one year and I thank you however I'm still looking for a good react native tutorial if you could recommend or even start the course I'll be glad
Thank you very much 🎉❤you change my mind set and I understood now how I need to work love from sri Lanka 🇱🇰 ❤
1. ditch react
2. adopt a framework with clean syntax and a stable ecosysem like vue with nuxt
lack some graphical content for holding focus, overwall good video :)
Pedro why not go into react native as well? there is no one as good at explaining it as you would be, and it's not that far away from react either
So how about your 2023 course? There is the point to study or find something newer?
I am currently having a hard time dealing with react-query
I dont get it how you can manage state with it
so is your react js video series out dated ?
Noo, i would say 85% of the stuff there is still relevant
Where?
Is it easy for a react native developer to react js
Yes!
I would imagine so, I understand native to just be a react framework that converts react to native phone languages. I am wondering myself the opposite if it would be easy for a react/next dev to jump into native. I have been wanting to take the best projects I have and run react native apps for them all, which i feel will round out my portfolio in a solid manner.
@@DigitalAlchemyst oh great am RN also
Thanks a lot for all u have done for free education
Can you make tutorial react native on project idx
Is it okay to learn react with inertia and laravel?
ty :D
Pedro we want react native course
tu é brasileiro?
Sou simm!!
Next Js video requested.
thank you so much
thanks 🥰
Big companies are ditching Typescript.
I work for a big company and I can assure you that we are not. It is highly unlikely that companies would not use typescript since it is objectively better then JavaScript, and most of the web is written in js. Also, to stop using ts would require multiple companies migrating entire codebases, which could take years. So i can assure typescript is still very essential