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Reddit mentions of Node.js the Right Way: Practical, Server-Side JavaScript That Scales

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 2

We found 2 Reddit mentions of Node.js the Right Way: Practical, Server-Side JavaScript That Scales. Here are the top ones.

Node.js the Right Way: Practical, Server-Side JavaScript That Scales
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Found 2 comments on Node.js the Right Way: Practical, Server-Side JavaScript That Scales:

u/MarlosTiltingMe ยท 1 pointr/summonerschool

Java, or Javascript? I know you said Java but often times new programmers confuse the two. For Java a good place to start if you're keen for it, is Minecraft. It's easy, well documented, and people will use what you make. For Javascript a good place to start is with literally any of the 9,000 frameworks that currently exist. I suggest Node. As far as resources for that, there's a lot. My channel is a very small one. As far as like, proper resources for Javascript I don't know too many. I never read any because I was a Java programmer long before I got into JS. That being said I DEFINITELY should've read a book before writing JS. Anything async fucked me for a solid day or two until I figured that out. I had no idea. I've heard this book is good