With the basics of #HTML#CSS and #JavaScript under my belt, I'm wanting to bid on my first small freelance gigs. But there's so much that I don't understand and it's keeping me from putting myself out there.
Like, when writing code for a client, how are you expected to deliver it? Do you just send them the file? Are you expected to upload it to their site/ email?
All the courses teach you how to code, but they don't teach you how to actually apply that knowledge to real-life circumstances. Right now my greatest fear is landing my first gig and not being able to perform - then my first and only review being a terrible one
If someone needs something like, say, an email subscription page, or user login page designed, do I just provide the html/css/js file and a server-side coder programs it to function properly?
I find a fantastic GitHub repository called: awesome-javascript
This repository contains a collection of awesome browser-side JavaScript library, resources and shiny things.
Link - github.com/sorrycc/awesome-j…
"You are given the choice between two sums of money: one million dollars or a penny that will double every day for 30 days. Which should you choose?"
-- Chris Cerrune
#100daysofcode#javascript#html#css#CodeNewbie
Also, I totally accidentally retweeted this original post, then went to delete the retweet, accidentally deleting the original post 😅I'll feel like a real #developer when I wrap my head around this platform
First tweet EVER 😁
This week I'll be starting @techedrob's Complete Web Developer's Course 2.0 on #udemy! I have sooooo many questions for the #dev community, first being; at what point did you feel ready to bid for your first paying project?
#FrontEnd#CSS#html#freelance