Coming soon - Get a detailed view of why an account is flagged as spam!
view details

This post has been de-listed

It is no longer included in search results and normal feeds (front page, hot posts, subreddit posts, etc). It remains visible only via the author's post history.

18
Creating tutorials: If you met a new dev trying to get into web3, what concepts would they need to know to become a professional?
Post Flair (click to view more posts with a particular flair)
Post Body

Hey folks.

I am creating free tutorials for Ethereum development. I am lucky my current gig lets me do this, and I don't want to waste the opportunity. It's a way to give back to a community that has done so much for me.

I'll first plan to host these via meetups in the form of workshops and record them. After that, the idea is to place them on Youtube. Later, once the workshop is solid, I'll record these as short and tight 5-minute segments that build up into a playlist—got to edit the "umms" and "uhh."

Basically: What should a dev know to become a professional web3 dev? What would an ideal journey look like?

The focus will be on:

  • Developers exclusively
  • Have at least one year of development experience or the capacity to pick up these skills.
  • Understands Full Stack JavaScript: JavaScript, NodeJS, and React.
  • Understands Github and Git.
  • Has an interest in learning Solidity programming language.
  • Have sufficient interest in web3 to attend a workshop.
  • No prior web3 experience is required.

Some questions I'd love the community's feedback on:

  1. What sort of tutorials would you like to see if you were a new dev?
  2. As an intermediate developer, looking back, what sorts of concepts would you wish had a more straightforward explanation.
  3. As a professional developer, what sorts of web3-specific things would you wish people interviewing for your company should know? If you could wave a magic wand, and those concepts/tools/ideas would be explained well, what would they be?
  4. How should tutorials be structured? Small 5-minute videos on concepts that build upon each other?
  5. What is your favorite online resource? Why?
  6. What is the most critical question that I have not asked?
  7. What are a few things that annoy you about current tutorials today?
  8. How do you prefer to consume technical content?
  9. Any additional feedback would be fantastic.

Feel free to answer any or all of the questions. I'd love to hear from you.

Author
Account Strength
70%
Account Age
3 years
Verified Email
Yes
Verified Flair
No
Total Karma
892
Link Karma
320
Comment Karma
293
Profile updated: 4 days ago
Posts updated: 7 months ago

Subreddit

Post Details

We try to extract some basic information from the post title. This is not always successful or accurate, please use your best judgement and compare these values to the post title and body for confirmation.
Posted
2 years ago