Angular — The Complete Guide (2025 Edition) vs CSS for JavaScript Developers
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
Angular — The Complete Guide (2025 Edition)
Frontend Masters · Web Development
CSS for JavaScript Developers
Per-criterion
The 36.5-hour course was fully re-recorded in 2024 to cover modern Angular including signals, standalone components, and the latest Angular 19+ patterns. Coverage is broad — components, directives, services, forms, HTTP, authentication, NgRx, and deployment. Reviewers consistently praise the real-world examples and structured progression. The main caveat noted across multiple sources is that depth stays at a solid intermediate level rather than advanced production engineering — expert reviewers suggest Pluralsight or Frontend Masters for deeper architectural content.
Maximilian Schwarzmüller is described as a rockstar Udemy instructor with rare ability to make abstract Angular concepts tangible. Multiple student testimonials highlight his explanatory style — he explains what he is doing and why, not just having students mimic code. His screencasts are clear, well-paced, and consistent across 36+ hours. The consensus across 48 analyzed opinions is that Max is one of the best Angular instructors available at this price point, enthusiastic and engaging throughout.
At Udemy sale price of $15–20, 36.5 hours of fully updated Angular content is exceptional value. The course has been re-recorded from scratch in 2024, making the material current with signals and standalone components. The list price of $189.99 should never be paid — Udemy promotional cycles are predictable and frequent. At sale price, this is ranked among the top Angular resources available anywhere online.
The course includes a hands-on mega project built step by step across the curriculum, plus independent assignments with instructor solution videos. Projects cover real patterns — reactive forms, HTTP data fetching, authentication flows, and state management. Reviewers note the final project is robust and portfolio-relevant, though some found it intimidating if they fell behind the pace of the course.
The 2024 rewrite aligns content with how Angular teams actually work in 2025 — standalone components, signals for reactive state, and TypeScript throughout. Angular remains a dominant framework in enterprise web development, and the skills map directly to job descriptions. Some learners note that advanced production concerns (module federation, performance budgets, micro-frontends) are out of scope, which is fair for a foundational course.
The course covers all major CSS layout algorithms — flow, positioned, flexbox, grid — plus typography, animations, custom properties, and advanced polish techniques across 10 modules and 200+ lessons. Rather than cataloguing properties, Josh builds mental models for how each layout mode reasons about space, which multiple reviewers describe as "mastery level" coverage. The December 2025 update added subgrid and reading-flow content, keeping the curriculum current. The depth and pedagogical structure place it above any free alternative for developers who want to understand CSS rather than memorise it.
Josh W. Comeau is the most consistently praised CSS educator in independent developer communities. His personal blog (joshwcomeau.com) is cited as a reference-quality resource on its own, and the course extends that same standard of clarity into interactive format. Endorsements from Adam Wathan (Tailwind CSS creator), Kent C. Dodds (Epic React), and Laurie Barth (Netflix) are not marketing copy — each commenter is themselves a well-known practitioner. The Hacker News thread from October 2021 includes commenters praising his use of mental models such as "media queries as IF statements" as genuinely clarifying rather than simplified.
The course is available standalone on Josh's own platform (css-for-js.dev) with one-time pricing and lifetime access to updates, and also via a Frontend Masters subscription (~$39/month or $390/year). The standalone price has drawn criticism — one Hacker News commenter in 2021 noted paying $418 with taxes and called it "one heck of an expensive course," and another pointed out that the basic tier excludes flexbox and responsive design. For Frontend Masters subscribers who access it as part of a broader library, the value calculation tilts strongly positive. Regional purchasing power parity discounts and occasional sales (Valentine's Day, Black Friday) improve accessibility, but the sticker price remains the main objection in critical reviews.
Each of the 10 modules ends in a workshop — a larger, real-world-inspired project that applies the module's concepts. Students build responsive layouts, polished UI components from Figma mockups, custom form controls, and animated interactions. The interactive exercises and mini-games within lessons are consistently praised for building intuition rather than just testing recall. One reviewer's only complaint was being required to use Styled Components and React in workshops rather than their preferred tools — a minor friction point in an otherwise well-designed project sequence that demonstrates real production patterns.
The course is explicitly designed for developers working in React, Vue, or Angular component architectures, and the examples reflect production patterns rather than academic exercises. Multiple reviewers with years of professional experience report that the course changed how they reason about CSS in daily work — "less guesswork" and "more efficient" are the recurring phrases. Noel De Martin, a developer with 10+ years of experience, called it "the best course I've ever taken" and said it "should be mandatory for anyone working in the frontend." The coverage of CSS-in-JS, CSS variables, and component-level architecture maps directly to current React/Vue production workflows.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.