ShardPhoenix comments on Computer Science and Programming: Links and Resources - Less Wrong
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Shamelessly crowdsourcing the availability heuristic: I'm trying to learn web development and have been looking for resources to learn it on my own. My goals are fairly modest; I'd like to make basically static pages and a few forms.
So far I've tried HTML/CSS tutorials, which were approachable and fun to play around with offline, but did not offer step by step instructions on how to translate that online. I also tried the Udemy course, which was great on lesson 1, but gratuitously racheted up the complexity on lesson 2 with unexplained Python code.
So, thus far, there's plenty of materials but they tend to skip some inferential distance when approached by a total noob. Does anyone have recommendations for a lesson plan that can take me all the way there?
If you just want static pages, you can just make them and then upload them to some webhost via FTP. Your ISP may offer a small amount of free webhosting, or there are various free webhosts you can find by searching. You can then use an FTP client (such as WinSCP on windows) to upload the files to the server.
For forms, it depends on exactly what you want to do (just emailing stuff can be done through pure HTML IIRC), but the easiest way would be through PHP - there are many cheap/free PHP hosts and you can just upload the PHP files to the host and have them work without further setup.