So once I purchase it will be available forever?
The the reason why I ask is because I'm in school right and won't have time to complete it.
I'll have time over the summer though.
I looked around a bit, and searched terms like "administrative assistant", etc... but no luck.
I find myself in an office environment, which I never anticipated (I majored in science) and it seems this is my career now. Never expected this, really, but I'm being fast-tracked for management. I'm a little uncomfortable though. Currently being asked to perform tasks more in line with an AA or office clerk than what I'm used to. While I'm not making mistakes, I'm constantly worried about screwing up little office etiquette things... like am I folding this damn letter correctly, or formatting the text appropriately, etc.
Any recommendations on a brush-up course in this area? For my own peace of mind.
READ THIS:
At checkout, add "CHANGEIT" as coupon to get an additional $5 off of each purchase, making course prices effectively 10 bucks.
READ THIS:
At checkout, add "CHANGEIT" as coupon to get an additional $5 off of each purchase, making course prices effectively 10 bucks.
lol thanks.Relaxation Techniques to Release Office Stress. I mean you're literally concerned if you're folding paper correctly. You might want to start with this first.
That reminds me, I picked up the "Learn to Code by Making Games - Complete C# Unity" course a while ago and never actually did it, really need to get onto that.
Thinking of going for a C++ course instead though.
Was thinking of this one,
The Unreal Engine Developer Course - Learn C++ & Make Games
I would like to second that question by someone about statistics
https://www.udemy.com/the-complete-sql-bootcamp/What's a good course for learning sequel (I think it's actually called SQL? Not too sure.)
https://www.udemy.com/the-complete-sql-bootcamp/
This is the most popular SQL course on the site, I haven't done it myself but if I was looking at learning SQL I would pick that one.
Bit of advice would be great. I just bought these four.
- The Web Developer Bootcamp
-The Complete Java Developer Course. Learn Step by Step
- Complete Python Bootcamp: Go from zero to hero in Python
- Learn to Code by Making Games - Complete C# Unity Developer
This isn't really a career oriented purchase, I am happy being an English & History teacher. That said, I enjoy learning and have fond memories of coding at school in pitiful languages like Basic and Pascal. Obviously this is a much bigger step.
Any suggestion on what order I should best attack these in as a fun learning exercise? I know it's a random assortment but will any principles and fundamentals in a particular one of these serve me well in the others?
Python is probably the friendliest language for coding novices, and it appears that Python Bootcamp course largely focuses on learning 'pure' programming concepts - i.e. you don't also need to learn the programming interface of anything beyond a command-line environment (and the programming interface for a command-line environment is basically just a print() function). Then I would do the Java course, followed by the C# Unity Developer course. (I suggest this route because Java is extremely similar to C#, but again the Java course is focused more on pure programming fundamentals without a huge framework--Unity--to learn simultaneously.) I would top it off with the web developer bootcamp.
I did programming at University but it wasn't a games course so never did C++, just C.I'm going through this one right now. It's actually pretty good, even for someone who went to school for programming
How much do courses usually cost?
Varies a bit, but a lot of them are like $200, so getting them for $10 is kind of nice.
Nobody answered before :/ Is the Unity cert thing worth it? Is it part of the package etc?