Do you use JavaScript only when you have to? Is jQuery the last framework you remember? Maybe you don't know about the class keyword in JavaScript? Would be nice to have a static typing here, wouldn't it? How about a nice overview of the front-end technologies?
If you find any of the above questions interesting, this course is a great choice for you :) I show modern JavaScript techniques and libraries (especially React) here. This course will be surely a great start for you.
I'm here to help you with the dynamic JavaScript world, where "new day, new framework" stopped being a joke a long time ago (we have more than 500 daily publications to npm, according to modulecounts). Node, React, webpack - all the things are presented here in a nice form, compared with well-known Java tools. This course is about a current state of JavaScript, HTML and CSS, about modern tools and it gives a great overview of all of this. Front-end in a nutshell.
And, hey, TypeScript makes everything really readable :)
Classes created as functions. strange variables scoping, a problematic this, type coercion and some other odd things are popular JavaScript problems. I've seen a plenty of memes about them. On the other hand, I'm pretty sure, not every meme author took a look at the newest ECMAScript standards and mechanisms allowing many new possibilities when it comes to the front-end development. And, is this frameworks situation really as bad?
I'm sharing my knowledge and experience with you in order to prove, that it is not as bad after all!