The Complete JavaScript Course 2024: From Zero to Expert! vs Full-Stack Engineer Career Path
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Udemy · Web Development
The Complete JavaScript Course 2024: From Zero to Expert!
Codecademy (Pro) · Web Development
Full-Stack Engineer Career Path
Per-criterion
Praised across HN for "behind the scenes" coverage of execution context, scope chain, hoisting and prototypes, paired with modern ES6+. The 2024 refresh added optional chaining and async patterns, though ES2023+ features land slower than on MDN.
Consistently named alongside Stephen Grider and Andrew Mead as a top Udemy instructor. The recurring caveat is delivery — one HN commenter called him "a great teacher but ridiculously monotonous", a real preference filter rather than a one-off.
Listed at $200 but realistically bought on Udemy sales for ~$15-$20. At sale price, 69 hours of video plus lifetime access make it one of the highest content-per-dollar paid JS resources. No commenter we tracked recommends full price.
Three substantial build-along projects (Pig Game, Bankist, Forkify) are repeatedly singled out. Forkify in particular forces real architectural decisions — MVC, async data, module bundling — rather than toy examples.
Strong on language fundamentals and vanilla DOM work that transfer to any framework. Weaker on production tooling — most learners supplement with a React or framework course afterwards to close the gap to job-ready.
Curriculum covers HTML, CSS, JS, React, Redux, Node, Express, SQL, PostgreSQL, auth and deployment across roughly 250-450 hours. Wider scope than the Front-End path, but the backend modules draw more "feels mechanical" critiques than the well-scoped HTML/CSS opening.
Same curriculum-by-committee model as the Front-End path — clear early lessons, but no single voice carrying you through nine months of material. Backend modules in particular feel like a relay of authors rather than one instructor walking you up the stack.
$24/month over 6-9 months totals $150-$240, against The Odin Project (free, full-stack) and freeCodeCamp (free, multi-cert). Corpus calls it defensible for structure, hard to defend on content alone.
Two Pro-only capstone projects (a full-stack web app and a portfolio site) are the most cited reason to pay over the free tier. Mid-path builds remain praised as friction-removing but criticised as too guided to count as fully independent portfolio work.
Sandbox-only design helps front-end beginners but hurts the backend half — learners reach Node and Express without running a local server, env vars, or real deployment. Curriculum-to-production gap is the corpus's loudest reservation.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.