Learn Java vs Complete Intro to React v9
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Codecademy · Web Development
Learn Java
Frontend Masters · Web Development
Complete Intro to React v9
Per-criterion
The Learn Java course runs roughly 17 hours across 16 lessons covering Hello World, variables, object-oriented Java, conditionals and control flow, arrays and ArrayLists, loops, string methods, classes, inheritance and polymorphism. Reviewers at javarevisited, BitDegree and Simple Programmer consistently describe the content as accurate, current and well-sequenced — BitDegree confirms "the content on the platform is actually up to par" and that Codecademy "constantly updates its courses." The recurring caveat is depth: the syllabus is solid for beginners but, as the javinpaul Medium review puts it, "too basic for anyone who knows Java," and Simple Programmer notes it does not cover clean-code principles, software architecture or other meta-concepts.
There is no traditional instructor — Learn Java is text-and-exercise based with no lecture videos, narration or named teacher. Reviewers split on this. Simple Programmer warns that "if you prefer this kind of learning style, you'll have to look for an alternative platform," and Hacker News and missiongraduate critics note the absence of video as a drawback for visual learners. Defenders counter that the in-context written explanations are exceptionally clear: the official course review from Mihai C. credits Codecademy with explaining Java "so simply" after years of failing to learn elsewhere. The score reflects strong written pedagogy offset by zero human/video instruction.
The Learn Java course itself is free, and reviewers near-universally call Codecademy's free tier its strongest argument — byminah describes it as "genuinely useful, not a stripped-down teaser" and "more generous than almost any competitor." The friction is the optional Pro subscription: byminah and multiple aggregated user complaints warn that "Codecademy auto-renews aggressively and their refund policy is essentially non-existent," with "multiple users report being charged for a full year after forgetting to cancel." Because the core Java track is free, value is high — but anyone upgrading to Pro for the certificate and guided projects should diary the renewal date.
Codecademy's project-based, learn-by-doing model is the heart of the experience: Simple Programmer notes you "create a simple piece of software to immediately put it all into practice," and hackr.io confirms "you will develop portfolio projects through Codecademy." For beginners these guided builds are motivating and effective. The ceiling, however, is real — byminah is blunt that "real world complexity, messy codebases, debugging under pressure, and production-level thinking are not things Codecademy prepares you for well," and Simple Programmer flags that the in-browser editor ships with no debugger and barely teaches debugging at all.
The course gets a complete beginner writing working Java fast with zero environment setup — a genuine practical win that javinpaul singles out ("you don't need to set up your Java environment to write a simple Java program"). But several reviewers stress the gap between Codecademy exercises and real development. The classic Hacker News critique is that learners are never taught what a text editor is, how to deploy work, or how to use code in actual development; byminah confirms advanced learners "consistently hit a ceiling," and Simple Programmer summarises that finishing a course or two will not make you "a complete programmer." Skills transfer well to fundamentals, less so to production work and the certificate is not accredited.
v9 covers React 18 and 19 features (form actions, Suspense, the React Compiler) plus a modern Vite + TanStack Router + TanStack Query stack. Praised for currency, with a minority of long-term Frontend Masters subscribers flagging that other courses in the catalog can drift.
Brian Holt is the most consistently praised aspect across nine years of Hacker News mentions. Learners use words like 'excellent', 'great', and 'brilliant'. His pet adoption project framing is repeatedly cited as memorable.
Requires a Frontend Masters subscription (currently $39/month), which is consistently described as worth it if you complete more than one course per month. Less competitive against free alternatives if you only want a single React intro.
The single build-along project (an e-commerce app in v9, evolved from the pet adoption app of earlier versions) is praised for being non-trivial and integrating real ecosystem tools (TanStack Query, Vitest) rather than toy examples.
Holt spends real time on tooling (Vite, ESLint, Prettier, code-splitting, Vitest) and modern ecosystem choices, which is the single most-cited reason people say his courses transferred well to their day jobs.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.