About 10 years ago I learned to code. I had zero programming experience and didn’t know anything about computers in general. I fell in love with it after making my first super janky app and it has become my hobby and profession ever since.

Currently, I’m an engineering manager and JavaScript developer. I’ve worked at small startups and large corporations. Along the way I’ve made a lot of mistakes and learned a ton.

Pssst… I also have a pretty damn good podcast and if you’re confused on what to learn I want you to listen to this episode 🤖

https://open.spotify.com/episode/6pOoSEYBsFgCr055zTUSj3

Check out this if you want to hear more about my shady past 😬

https://open.spotify.com/episode/0i6jRupnR4Bd57CEY5Ip28

I also own Parsity.io, a coding program where we teach career changers how to code and switch careers into software development. It’s not for everyone and we only enroll 10 students per cohort. If you’re interested in learning more, schedule a chat with me (not sales-y at all) 👉here 👈

Check out the resources below which I know will help you learn JS, get clarity on what to learn, create amazing side projects and test your knowledge. If this stuff is a little too advanced, you should check out dev30.xyz, an amazing program for people looking to learn JS, build in public and work with a supportive community.

<aside> 💡 Your Coding Resources 👇

</aside>

📖 My e-book ⇒ the JavaScript I Wish I learned as a Junior Developer

Full Stack Developer Road Map

🤖 Interactive JS Challenges

https://github.com/projectshft/js-super-basics

Side Project Template

Form Challenge

<aside> 💡 BONUS 👇

</aside>

Backend JSNode/Express Starter Kit (to learn Node/Express)

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1dpOskXXJkSKnmELOwxZOipj3i6dhJXOjva4naDfdq5U/edit?usp=sharing

Your LinkedIn Cheat Sheet

Still thinking? Take the first step. It’s the hardest one 👇