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dont tell me to refer w3school or javascriptkit or any other website.

2007-05-01 05:13:19 · 9 answers · asked by ramesh.shah 1 in Computers & Internet Programming & Design

9 answers

Learn JavaScript Black Book...

2007-05-01 05:31:00 · answer #1 · answered by Vaibhav 4 · 0 0

The best way I know is to to learn from starting up your own website. It can be your personal website, or some business idea you have in mind. On the process of creating the site, you will always have the ideas of "how can I do this?" or "If this can be done this way, it would be nice." Then you will have a goal, then search on the internet for the solution for your goal. You will be surprised how much you have learned (javascript/HTML/CSS) after you are done with the site.

The thing is, you can never learn something if you don't apply them to a project/website

2007-05-01 05:19:23 · answer #2 · answered by SomethingToAnswer 2 · 0 0

personally i wouldnt suggest learning any language on your own, but, if your motivated and self Disciplined you may have a chance. starting with java may also not be in your best interest (advanced). there is basic, visual basic 6, and a couple of other fundimental languages i would suggest learing a little about first. If you dont know any language basic and vb6 is a perfect learning language!!! i have been programming for 13 years and your better off learning whats called "Pseudocode" its language independent which means you can apply it to any language. Pseudocode basically teaches you the fundamentals of structure, logic, variables, arrays, loops and the basic tools every "GOOD" programmer should know. try to find a book on logic or Pseudocode to see if it is somthing you like. C++ and java are one of the more advanced languages and the most difficult to learn, but if you know either you can program in any language!!!!!!!!
programming is a step by step learning curve, start small, very small, dont overwhelm yourself and youll be fine!!!!

2007-05-01 05:25:32 · answer #3 · answered by math guy 2 · 0 0

The best way for me personally is hands on experience or training. I cannot read a book and learn java, that is good for small problems you are having when you know what you are looking for.

A great site is http://www.watchandlearnjava.com.

Here you can view online tutorials for free and you can also buy their package for as little as $27!

2007-05-01 05:24:39 · answer #4 · answered by aaronarnett2002 1 · 0 0

Why not? Those sites are very good. If you can't learn it from there, try a book... the Dummies books are very good. If you can't learn it from that, you need to try a different career. Programmers learn from books and articles. That is the way we work. If you can't live in that world, give up on it now...

2007-05-01 05:27:48 · answer #5 · answered by polly_peptide 5 · 0 0

Contact Technical Support @ +1^800^256^7021 ==========Call Now========== @ +1^800^256^7021

2016-05-18 00:31:34 · answer #6 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Believe it or not, the "... for Dummies" books are extremely informative and helpful when your trying to learn something. Find "Java for Dummies" and use that to learn Javascript.

P.S. - What's wrong with learning from websites?

2007-05-01 05:17:00 · answer #7 · answered by Chip 7 · 1 0

I learned a lot buying books. Maybe you can buy a book. Now the trick is Books are very frustrating because they teach you by small steps...trial and error...but unfortunately ther isnt another way to learn something...just read, try it, sceqw it up, retry it...and so on.
Good luck.

2007-05-01 05:19:54 · answer #8 · answered by Umpalumpa 4 · 0 0

My "teacher" was Tomer Shiran (Doc Javascript) - see www.webreference.com/js/ and his book "Learn Advanced Javascript Programming"

2007-05-01 05:30:16 · answer #9 · answered by fjpoblam 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers