Photo by Luca Bravo on Unsplash

I've been finding a lot of articles on DEV lately that garner a TON of reactions, especially ones that provide lists of more than 20 to 50+ resources!

That's a lot. 🀯

A lot of choice paralysis, too.

In reality, it's not about how popular the resources are, or how many you can add to your archive list (where you may not even pick up to read). Instead, it's about what problems these resources solve for you that makes a list successful. So, I will do just that!

Keep in mind these are my own opinions and by all means, if you like those really long resource lists, do use them. This list is meant to be accessible, cost-effective, and focused! These are also resources that have been successful for my learning.

My resources are all multimodal ways of learning (audiovisual, reading) - some may not be fully accessible by nature. At the end of the day, you know what works best for you!

Lastly, my resources are NOT hundreds of hours long! I studied all I have of web development throughout the last year of my full-time undergraduate degree, so when it comes to time-management, I've got you covered ☺️

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HTML / CSS

Absolute must if you're going into web development, and 100% needed for frontend development. These two are the builders of the visual front of the web

JavaScript

Literally the language of the modern web. You'll definitely need this to learn the whole ecosystem of the web, from Node.js to package bundlers like Webpack