Complete Intro to React, v9 vs Learn TypeScript
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Frontend Masters · Web Development
Complete Intro to React, v9
Codecademy · Web Development
Learn TypeScript
Per-criterion
Complete Intro to React, v9
The course covers React 19 from initial project scaffolding with Vite through hooks (useState, useEffect, useContext, useReducer), component composition, routing with TanStack Router, and performance patterns — all organized around building a production- style e-commerce application rather than isolated toy examples. Reviewers consistently praise the modern toolchain (no Create React App), the focus on current patterns that actually work in production codebases, and the absence of outdated class-component material. The v9 designation signals genuine curriculum updates rather than cosmetic refreshes, which is rare among multi-version React courses.
Brian Holt is described across all reviewed sources as an exceptional teacher — specifically praised for making complex concepts feel obvious through clear analogies, methodical build-up, and a conversational delivery that stays engaging across eight hours of video. Multiple reviewers note that experienced React developers still learn meaningful things from Holt's explanations, suggesting depth beyond what the beginner framing implies. He is repeatedly described as a GEM among Frontend Masters instructors.
The course requires a Frontend Masters subscription ($39/month or $390/year), which gives access to the full course catalogue of 200+ expert-level courses — not a single-course purchase. For developers who intend to use more than a few courses, the subscription offers strong value. For learners who only want this one course, the subscription model is a higher upfront cost than a typical Udemy purchase. Frontend Masters does not offer a permanent free tier, though the course notes and exercises are publicly accessible at react-v9.holt.courses.
The e-commerce project format means learners build a real application rather than disconnected code snippets, and the toolchain — Vite, ESLint, Prettier, TanStack — mirrors what professional React teams actually use. Reviewers who moved directly from the course to their first React role or freelance project report that the patterns transferred immediately. The course avoids outdated approaches that would confuse learners encountering a modern codebase, which sets it apart from older React curricula still teaching class components as the primary pattern.
Building a complete e-commerce application — covering product listings, a shopping cart, routing, and state management — gives learners a deployable project and a portfolio piece, not just completed exercises. Reviewers highlight that the project scope is substantial enough to demonstrate real React understanding without being overwhelming. The course's companion notes at react-v9.holt.courses also let learners self-pace the text-based curriculum independently of the video playback speed.
Learn TypeScript
Learn TypeScript covers the essentials of the language across seven lessons — Types, Functions, Complex Types (arrays and tuples), Union Types, Type Narrowing, and Advanced Object Types — in roughly 10 hours of guided content. The course holds a 4.6/5 rating on Codecademy from 2,298 ratings, with 65% awarding five stars. The Curricular.dev developer review confirms the content "covers the essentials" and is "a solid hands-on learning option for getting up to speed with TypeScript." The author of the New Screwdriver blog wrote that the TypeScript handbook "makes a lot more sense to me after this Codecademy course than it did before." The main content gap, flagged by multiple reviewers, is that the course is "a little light on coverage of classes and OOP, as well as modules and namespaces," which slightly offsets an otherwise strong foundation score.
Codecademy uses a curated, single-course-per-topic model rather than named celebrity instructors, and the Hackr.io review rates instruction 4/5 while noting the platform offers "only one high-quality course" instead of thousands of variable-quality alternatives. There is no live instructor and no real-time feedback; the ScoreBeyond review notes the platform "lacks live lectures or direct instructor interaction." An AI Learning Assistant provides automated, context-aware hints on the current lesson and solution code, partly compensating for the absence of a human teacher. Reviewers consistently describe the written explanations as "clear and easy to follow," which lifts the score, but the lack of any human guidance when stuck — forcing reliance on community forums — is the ceiling here.
The introductory Learn TypeScript course is free, including the lessons, quizzes, and guided projects; only the certificate of completion and some practice features sit behind the Plus ($17.49/month annual) or Pro ($29.99/month annual, $59.99 month-to-month) subscriptions. For a learner who only wants the TypeScript fundamentals, the free tier is exceptional value. The ScoreBeyond review scores price 4.8/5, citing "no payment required to start learning." The value score is held back by Codecademy's well-documented billing reputation: its Trustpilot profile sits around 2.7/5 across roughly 1,450 reviews, with recurring complaints about unexpected auto-renewals and difficult cancellations for those who do subscribe to Pro.
Hands-on practice is Codecademy's single strongest dimension and the most consistently praised aspect of this course. The Curricular.dev review observes that "almost every section requires you to run some code to learn the concept, followed by a practical hands-on exercise." Code is written in an in-browser terminal that behaves like a real command line, and each lesson is paired with a quiz and a guided project (7 lessons, 7 projects, 7 quizzes). One Codecademy learner, Anmol B., said the hands-on model beat Coursera, Scrimba, Udemy, and freeCodeCamp in their experience. The notable limitation: Curricular.dev points out the course "provides several guided projects, but no solo project opportunities," recommending learners supplement with independent builds.
For a skills course there is no test score to track, so we assess learning outcomes and readiness. Reviewers report concrete capability gains: the New Screwdriver author documented learning rest parameters, spread syntax, and `number.toFixed()`, and concluded the course "was worth my time investment" as preparation for reading the official TypeScript handbook independently. The Codecademy testimonial from Valerie J. credits the repetitive typing model with building "muscle memory and confidence." The principal caveat — surfaced across Reddit sentiment summaries and the ScoreBeyond review — is that the course is a strong on-ramp but not a destination: learners targeting real-world proficiency, generics depth, or OOP fluency will need follow-up resources and independent projects to convert the fundamentals into job-ready skill.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.