Programmer, humorist. Host of the Citizen Coder Podcast. I interview developers from all over the world, from beginners trying to break into the industry to senior devs.
Glad I found your post, a lot of good information here. I started learning Java a month ago, been doing Tim Buchalka's Java Masterclass on Udemy. As far as exercises goes there's a ton. I found codegym also, but price wise a little out of my league at the moment but seemed like an incredible resource for learning. As someone that might be more interested in visual/android than enterprise, should I still learn some spring, or after learning the core jump straight into android (I also really am interested in JavaFX)?
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Hi John,
Glad I found your post, a lot of good information here. I started learning Java a month ago, been doing Tim Buchalka's Java Masterclass on Udemy. As far as exercises goes there's a ton. I found codegym also, but price wise a little out of my league at the moment but seemed like an incredible resource for learning. As someone that might be more interested in visual/android than enterprise, should I still learn some spring, or after learning the core jump straight into android (I also really am interested in JavaFX)?