Geeksforgeeks, I agree because of the paywall. I’m a beginner and I guess I don’t see the problem with W3Schools yet. What are better resources beyond the official documentation?
I always use MDN if I need to check anything JS related. For React, I don’t see why use anything else other than the official documentation. If you’re learning I’d suggest Full Stack Open or even Odin Project which are courses that at least bother to explain a little of best practices.
Generally I’m not against w3 schools for quickly checking the syntax of something or how to use a specific method, but I always try stay clear of their larger code examples.
I was learning PHP a couple years back for some hobby side projects I was working on. They provide some code here about how to connect to an SQL database. I ended up using this code for almost a year on some publicly hosted sites.
The code they provided isn’t secure, though. It can output database errors to the client, and give away information about your database which a random user shouldn’t have access to.
Additionally, the beginning few pages for their SQL insertion examples doesn’t mention anywhere that you should be using prepared statements. There is a page slightly further down, but for the average person learning the language, there’s no reason for them not to just copy parts the extremely insecure code and use it in their projects.
W3 schools imo is great for quickly checking up on something, but generally it’s probably better to avoid their examples and look up the language standards somewhere else.
Geeksforgeeks, I agree because of the paywall. I’m a beginner and I guess I don’t see the problem with W3Schools yet. What are better resources beyond the official documentation?
I always use MDN if I need to check anything JS related. For React, I don’t see why use anything else other than the official documentation. If you’re learning I’d suggest Full Stack Open or even Odin Project which are courses that at least bother to explain a little of best practices.
Generally I’m not against w3 schools for quickly checking the syntax of something or how to use a specific method, but I always try stay clear of their larger code examples.
I was learning PHP a couple years back for some hobby side projects I was working on. They provide some code here about how to connect to an SQL database. I ended up using this code for almost a year on some publicly hosted sites.
The code they provided isn’t secure, though. It can output database errors to the client, and give away information about your database which a random user shouldn’t have access to.
Additionally, the beginning few pages for their SQL insertion examples doesn’t mention anywhere that you should be using prepared statements. There is a page slightly further down, but for the average person learning the language, there’s no reason for them not to just copy parts the extremely insecure code and use it in their projects.
W3 schools imo is great for quickly checking up on something, but generally it’s probably better to avoid their examples and look up the language standards somewhere else.