W3Schools was the reason i learned the higher-order-function .then (). There are certainly problems with W3Schools, but only one of the reasons u mentioned.
so, I've been studying from about 7 - 10 hours on W3Schools in the C# Language. after reading through some comment threads about W3Schools and why it's unreliable and some down talk on it I've realized that I probably wasted many valuable hours of my time on the website which isn't recognized by any major cooperation like W3C, I need help on any reliable coding/programming websites that could ...
W3Schools seems to cover less technologies than the other 2, but it appears it covers them well and even gives you exercises and a quiz after each tutorial. So maybe having less is a good thing, don't bite more than you can chew.
The certificates on W3Schools, however, are just random certificates on a random Internet site—i.e., they’re basically worthless and not worth paying money for. The title of this thread should be changed because it contains potentially misleading information. The W3C has and never will offer any kind of certifications.
I usually just use W3Schools as a quick reference. They do have some comprehensive stuff but it is not enough but hey, I use it as additional resource besides MDN and more resources means more examples and stuff that can help you understand a concept even further (of course, this depends on the quality of your resource). About additional websites, I just mentioned MDN. I know you’re not ...
W3Schools used to have a terrible reputation for recommending bad practices and misinformation while maintaining top rank in search engines. At one time people even wrote browser plugins to block W3Schools from search results.
W3Schools.com W3Schools offers free online tutorials, references and exercises in all the major languages of the web. Covering popular subjects like HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Python, SQL, Java, and many, many more.
W3Schools was recommended on one of my old web dev internships but I've mostly just used it as a reference for syntax more than anything. Things like knowing I want to use a switch case statement but needing to remember what a switch case statement looks like. Depending on how far away your test is, I'd try to actually write some Javascript and ...