Rust for TypeScript Developers vs CSS Grid and Flexbox, v2
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
Rust for TypeScript Developers
Frontend Masters · Web Development
CSS Grid and Flexbox, v2
Per-criterion
In 5 hours and 19 minutes the course maps every major Rust primitive to its TypeScript analogue: variables and mutability, number and string types, vectors, tuples, structs, enums with pattern matching, iterators, the borrow checker and ownership rules, traits, and error handling with Option and Result. The pacing is deliberately dense — ThePrimeagen makes no attempt to slow down for readers new to systems concepts. Reviewers consistently describe the content as non-trivial and current, though several note that 5 hours is a primer rather than a complete Rust education: the course ends just as WebAssembly, async Rust, and framework-level topics (Axum, Loco) would begin.
ThePrimeagen — a senior software engineer at Netflix, prolific Twitch streamer, and YouTuber — is the course's defining asset. The official Frontend Masters course page carries a 4.9/5 rating, and the specific praise is consistent: "entertaining, funny and with great examples throughout," "excellent material, fast paced and very content dense," and "not the typical watered down content you find often on online courses." His side-by-side comparison technique — writing the same construct in TypeScript then immediately in Rust — is repeatedly cited as the feature that makes unfamiliar ownership semantics land without feeling abstract. No reviewer in our sample criticises his clarity; the only caveat is that his pace may be a barrier for developers with no prior exposure to typed systems languages.
The course is subscription-only: approximately $39/month or $390/year, unlocking the full Frontend Masters library of 150+ courses. Learners who already subscribe treat this as a bonus title on a platform they already value. For someone who wants only a Rust introduction, the economics are less clear — the subscription buys access to all of Frontend Masters rather than this one course, and the course materials (theprimeagen.github.io/rust-for-typescript-devs/) are publicly accessible without a subscription. Trustpilot rates Frontend Masters at 4 stars overall (38 reviews), with consistent praise for instructor quality and periodic complaints about the absence of standalone purchase options.
The course is exercise-driven rather than project-driven. There is no cohesive build-along application in the style of a full-stack course — instead, learners write increasingly complex Rust snippets in parallel with TypeScript equivalents. This approach is pedagogically sound for learning syntax and memory semantics but produces nothing portfolio- ready. The GitHub repository (github.com/ThePrimeagen/rust-for- typescript-devs, 221 stars, 20 forks) stores lesson files and is publicly available. Multiple reviewers note the need to supplement the course with The Rust Book and Advent of Code exercises to build practical, deployable projects.
Rust's footprint in web tooling has grown substantially: Rspack (23x faster than Webpack), Biome (the successor to Rome), and the SWC JavaScript compiler are all Rust projects that web developers encounter daily. This course provides the ownership, borrowing, and trait semantics that underpin all of them. The TypeScript comparison framing also applies directly to WebAssembly work, where Rust is the dominant compile target. That said, the course stops before Axum, async Rust, and WASM-specific tooling — so a web developer who finishes this course can read Rust code in tooling projects but cannot yet write a Rust web server or compile to WASM without further study.
Covers responsive layout across two parts — Flexbox (grid systems, navigation, responsive images) and CSS Grid (Mondrian and magazine layouts, cards). Reviewers say it teaches modern layout "without hacks", though v2 predates subgrid and container queries.
Jen Kramer is the most-praised element — a long-time CSS educator who explains layout clearly and at a beginner-friendly pace. Learners and a Hacker News commenter call her CSS courses "very good" and her teaching "well taught, in-depth".
Requires a $39/month (or $390/year) Frontend Masters subscription rather than a one-time purchase — strong value if you use the wider catalog, weaker if you only want this one course. The course is included in the standard subscription.
More hands-on than most CSS courses: each section ends in build exercises and a capstone, including a Mondrian painting and magazine layouts. The builds are small practice pieces rather than a full portfolio site, but they reinforce the concepts well.
Flexbox and Grid are the everyday tools for production layout, and learners report finishing real site layouts noticeably faster afterward. The main gap is currency — the newer features (subgrid, container queries) are covered in Kramer's v3, not this version.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.