Learn Python 3 vs Modern JavaScript From The Beginning 2.0
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 Python 3
Udemy · Web Development
Modern JavaScript From The Beginning 2.0
Per-criterion
Fourteen lessons covering Hello World, control flow, lists, loops, functions, strings, dictionaries, classes, and file I/O give beginners a comprehensive syntax foundation. The 2021 revamp added Portfolio Projects and reorganised content to mirror a traditional CS curriculum. Reviewers consistently call the material well-sequenced and "comparable to what you'll find in the official documentation or a popular book," though the interactive editor's strict output matching — treating "Hello, world!" and "Hello world!" as different — frustrates learners and doesn't reflect real-world feedback.
There is no single instructor; the curriculum-by-committee model delivers clear written lessons with instant in-browser feedback. The three-panel layout (instructions, editor, output) is praised for keeping learners active rather than passive. The downside is the absence of any spoken explanation of the "why" — several reviewers note they absorbed mechanics without internalising purpose, and the Get-Unstuck video walkthroughs can short-circuit the struggle that builds real retention.
The course requires a Pro subscription (around $34.99/month or roughly $144–$240/year), though a free trial is available. Given that 3.3 million learners have enrolled and it remains Codecademy's most-started course, many find the price reasonable for structured interactive learning. The certificate, practice projects, quizzes, and code challenges are all Pro-gated, which reviewers with beginner budgets find frustrating. A small number note that free Python resources on YouTube or in the official docs cover the same syntax at zero cost.
The course teaches Python in a sandboxed browser environment that cannot accept user input during execution — a fundamental gap from real Python programs. Reviewers describe finishing the course feeling confident but then "losing their footing" when attempting an unguided project, because the sample-code scaffolding and video walkthroughs remove the discomfort that real problem-solving requires. The over-optimised blog reviewer put it precisely: the interactive editor "simplifies/automates aspects that differ from real-world programming environments." Web-development-specific Python (Flask, Django, APIs) is entirely absent from this course and requires separate study.
Codecademy's forums, Discord server organised by topic, in-lesson hint system, cheat sheets, and AI assistant are collectively well-regarded. The Codecademy forum thread where learners reported being 50% through and still confused attracted dozens of supportive peer responses, suggesting an active community. SwitchUp reviewers flag that forum support from staff can be inconsistent, and the overall SwitchUp platform rating sits at 3.15/5, partly dragged by billing and cancellation complaints rather than content support.
The 2.0 revision substantially expanded the original course, growing to 37+ hours across 23 modules that span vanilla JavaScript fundamentals, asynchronous programming, object-oriented patterns, modules and tooling, and a Node.js/Express backend capstone. Reviewers on Class Central and independent blogs consistently praise the logical progression from variables and data types through closures, prototypes, the event loop, and finally Webpack and Babel. The 111+ downloadable resources — including per-module markdown documentation — are regularly called out as unusually thorough for a Udemy course. The October 2025 update added modern array methods, optional chaining, and nullish coalescing, keeping content current with ECMAScript 2024. The primary structural weakness is that TypeScript, production-grade testing, and deployment workflows are absent; the course ends at a vanilla JavaScript frontier rather than a fully job-ready line. A handful of reviewers also note that advanced topics such as generators, iterators, and design patterns feel slightly rushed compared to the depth given to core language concepts.
Brad Traversy is one of the most recognisable names in self-taught web development instruction, with a teaching brand built across the Traversy Media YouTube channel and a decade of paid courses. Multiple independent review sources describe his core strength as translation — the ability to make abstract programming concepts land without jargon. The RealToughCandy Medium review credits him with having "a knack for taking tough concepts and putting them into plain English, all while you watch those concepts being coded." Student testimonials on the Udemy course page echo this consistently: "Brad has mastered explaining very complex topics in a simple manner that is very understandable." His delivery style is more energetic and conversational than instructors like Jonas Schmedtmann, which some learners explicitly prefer and which appears to sustain attention across the longer modules. The only recurring critique is pacing in the final third of the course — a minority of reviewers report that the backend (Node, Express, MongoDB) section moves faster than the JavaScript-core modules, requiring more pauses and re-watches to absorb.
Like virtually all Udemy courses, the listed price is a fiction. The course is nominally $25 USD but sells on Udemy's near-constant promotional schedule for $15-$20, with occasional drops to $10-$13. At those prices, 37+ hours of video, 111+ downloadable resources, 19 projects, and lifetime access with periodic updates is a strong deal. The January 2024 v2.0 update was delivered free to all prior purchasers — a genuine commitment to maintaining the course rather than releasing a separate paid SKU. For learners who prefer the Traversy Media subscription ($25/month or $199/year for 250+ hours of content), the economics shift even more favourably. The only note of caution is the Udemy pricing model itself: paying full list price is never the right move, and a minority of learners resent the artificial pricing structure regardless of what they ultimately pay. On pure content-per-dollar at the standard sale price, this course ranks among the strongest value propositions in paid JavaScript instruction.
The 2.0 course ships 19 projects, ranging from introductory DOM exercises to a full-stack RandomIdeas application built with Express, MongoDB, and a Webpack-bundled frontend. The standout project is the Flixx Movie App — an API-driven single-page application with custom routing, search functionality, pagination, and local storage — which requires learners to wire together asynchronous fetch calls, dynamic DOM rendering, and URL management without a framework scaffold. The Tracalorie App, built with object-oriented JavaScript and Bootstrap, is praised in multiple reviews as the project that forces real design decisions about class hierarchies and state management. The full-stack RandomIdeas capstone introduces Express routes, MongoDB schemas, and a Webpack frontend all at once, providing genuine breadth even if the depth per layer is introductory. A minority of reviewers wish some projects offered challenge-mode variants where learners attempt the build independently before watching the walkthrough; the course is primarily instructor-led throughout. All 19 project codebases are publicly available on GitHub (bradtraversy/modern_js_udemy_projects), which multiple learners cite as useful for reviewing, extending, or comparing approaches after completing the course.
The course deliberately focuses on vanilla JavaScript — no React, Vue, Angular, TypeScript, or dedicated testing frameworks. That focus has a measurable payoff: the fundamentals transfer to any framework or runtime, and learners who follow this course with a dedicated React or Node.js course report noticeably less friction picking up framework-specific patterns. The real-world gap is in the tooling layer. The course introduces Webpack and Babel but stops short of the CI/CD, deployment, testing pipelines, and TypeScript patterns that define 2026 production JavaScript environments. Most learners finishing the course are adjacent to the job market but not fully ready without supplementary material in those areas. The backend capstone (Express + MongoDB) is a genuine full-stack exercise, but it is also the section review sources most often describe as rushed — covering territory that normally fills its own dedicated course in three or four condensed modules.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.