Hi Feyyaz,
Whatever you'll do in the future, learning web development is a great idea, so keep doing that.
Visual Studio Code is THE editor right now. And it's free.
For the images, you can get them from any free repository: freeimages.com is one of those.
Html, css and javascript are the basics and yes, you should definitely begin with HTML. When you have a grasp on the main elements (tags) you won't have to write them like you do it now: TIP: have a look at ZEN coding (asa Emmet coding) to save A LOT of your time, from the first minute.
Another tip: while you work on your corse, look for the examples on w3schools.com. They are explained beautifully, you have tons of examples, and you see the end result immediately. This applies to html css and javascript.
My belief is that if you know the main 30 HTML elements, you are good to go.
After you finish CSS (equally important), to get a little boost to your motivation have a look at Bootstrap. You'll be able to create professional-looking web sites very quickly. You'll love it.
Javascript is the hardest of all. The best course I've ever seen (and believe me, I've seen a lot) is on Pluralsight.com, and it's called Rapid Javascript Training. You can try it for free.
When you finish the magic 3 (html, css and js) you have just begun, but you can make basic websites leveraging the "easy" libraries, like Bootstrap and JQuery.
After that, if you are really serious about developing, you should choose a web framework. You need to choose one among Angular, React or Vue, to complete the client side part of web develpment. I've chosen Angular, but any one there is fine.
Then there's the server side. But suggestions on that only after you complete the client side .
Good luck!
Whatever you'll do in the future, learning web development is a great idea, so keep doing that.
Visual Studio Code is THE editor right now. And it's free.
For the images, you can get them from any free repository: freeimages.com is one of those.
Html, css and javascript are the basics and yes, you should definitely begin with HTML. When you have a grasp on the main elements (tags) you won't have to write them like you do it now: TIP: have a look at ZEN coding (asa Emmet coding) to save A LOT of your time, from the first minute.
Another tip: while you work on your corse, look for the examples on w3schools.com. They are explained beautifully, you have tons of examples, and you see the end result immediately. This applies to html css and javascript.
My belief is that if you know the main 30 HTML elements, you are good to go.
After you finish CSS (equally important), to get a little boost to your motivation have a look at Bootstrap. You'll be able to create professional-looking web sites very quickly. You'll love it.
Javascript is the hardest of all. The best course I've ever seen (and believe me, I've seen a lot) is on Pluralsight.com, and it's called Rapid Javascript Training. You can try it for free.
When you finish the magic 3 (html, css and js) you have just begun, but you can make basic websites leveraging the "easy" libraries, like Bootstrap and JQuery.
After that, if you are really serious about developing, you should choose a web framework. You need to choose one among Angular, React or Vue, to complete the client side part of web develpment. I've chosen Angular, but any one there is fine.
Then there's the server side. But suggestions on that only after you complete the client side .
Good luck!
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