Go & Vanilla JS: Fullstack Without Frameworks vs Codecademy Learn JavaScript
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
Go & Vanilla JS: Fullstack Without Frameworks
Codecademy · Web Development
Codecademy Learn JavaScript
Per-criterion
Ten hours eleven minutes covering the full stack end-to-end: Go project setup and architecture, a JSON REST API with structured handlers, Postgres integration via a repository interface pattern, Vanilla JS web components, a client-side SPA router built from scratch, View Transitions API, search/filter/sort, and a complete JWT authentication flow covering registration, login, server-side middleware, and client-side route guards. Published May 27, 2025 — compatible with Go 1.22+ and modern browser APIs. The course deliberately avoids backend frameworks (no Gin, Echo, or Fiber), relying on Go's standard library, keeping outcomes transferable to any Go project.
Maximiliano Firtman is a prolific Frontend Masters instructor with prior courses on Mobile Web Development, Progressive Web Apps, and JavaScript Performance. The course holds a 4.9/5 star platform rating — among the highest for full-stack courses on Frontend Masters. Students consistently cite his habit of explaining architectural decisions and trade-offs rather than simply typing out code, and his willingness to debug real issues live during recording rather than presenting pre-cleaned output. Reviewers describe him as a "true master" whose teaching style emphasises the reasoning behind every decision.
Access requires a Frontend Masters subscription (~$39/month or ~$390/year for individuals) rather than a one-time purchase. Strong value for learners using the broader catalog — Frontend Masters covers JavaScript, TypeScript, React, CSS, Node.js, and dozens of related tracks under one subscription. Weaker for those taking only this course. No free tier beyond a short preview. The subscription cost is the dominant frustration across otherwise positive reviews, consistent with complaints across the entire Frontend Masters catalog.
The course builds a complete movie catalogue application end-to-end: a Go REST API with structured JSON handlers, a Postgres layer using a repository interface pattern, AIR-powered live-reload during development, full JWT authentication (registration, login, server-side middleware, golang-jwt token generation), and a Vanilla JS SPA with a hand-rolled client-side router, View Transitions, web components for every UI element, a search/filter/sort feature, and authenticated user pages (My Account, Favorites, Watchlist). Full authentication including client-side route guards distinguishes this course from most full-stack offerings that leave auth as an exercise or third-party library call.
The deliberate no-framework approach teaches patterns that transfer to any technology choice: the router is built from scratch, web components replace UI libraries, state management uses the Proxy pattern. Students report that this improves their ability to evaluate frameworks critically, because they understand what each framework is solving. Go's standard library — net/http, database/sql, log/slog — maps directly to production Go codebases. The Postgres repository pattern, AIR for live-reload, and Postman-tested API routes represent practices encountered in real engineering teams.
Eleven lessons covering variables, data types, conditionals, functions, loops, arrays, objects, and iterators — a clean, well-sequenced syntax tour for absolute beginners. The ceiling is scope: it teaches the language in isolation, not the DOM or the browser where most beginners expect to use it.
No single instructor — the curriculum-by-committee model means clear, bite-sized written lessons with instant feedback, but no voice walking you through the why. Strong for syntax drilling, weak for the conceptual glue that turns drills into understanding.
The core lessons are genuinely free, which is the single strongest argument in the corpus. Pro ($24/mo) unlocks the certificate, practice projects, and quizzes. For a syntax intro the free tier alone is hard to beat on price-to-value.
Mini-projects (a whale-speech translator, a console cash register) are fun and confidence-building, but the meatier practice projects sit behind Pro. Reviewers repeatedly note you finish without knowing how to start your own unguided project.
The loudest reservation in the corpus. Exercises run in a sandbox console and focus on syntax, not the DOM — so learners reach the end able to pass challenges but not to wire JavaScript into a real web page without further study.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.