Reci želite pisati o tome kako strašan vaš ljubimac toster je i objaviti ga svi vide. Reci želite da aplikaciju na kojoj korisnici mogu komunicirati sa svojim vlastitim virtualni ljubimac tostere. Reci želite početi sa prodajom kućne ljubimce tostera online Jednom kada ste uvjereni svima koliko super su.
U ovom slučaju, I’d probably be a bit concerned about your sanity. Ali, more importantly, you’d want to learn some web development – to je, the art of creating web pages like the one you’re viewing right now.
Even if you’re not into pet toasters, there are plenty of reasons to learn how to develop for the web (or the Internet, u intertubes, ili that weird thing kids use these days, depending on your preference):
- Creating websites for a hobby, club, business, itd.
- Making awesome apps for the web, telefone, and tablets
- Impressing people with your knowledge of floating block elements and binding live event handlers to them
Many say that web design is the 4th “R” along with reading, writing, and arithmetic – never mind that there’s no “r” in the phrase.
Oh, and then there’s this:
Web development uses a programming language called JavaScript to make web pages interactive. You can do some pretty epic things (like this) with it, but it’s so easy to get started with JavaScript that a complete computer science beginner can pick it up. It’s many programmers’ introduction to computer science (it was mine) before they expand to more advanced languages. You could call it a gateway language.
Whoever you are – toaster entrepreneur, budding computer scientist, blogger, artist, Homo sapiens – it’s definitely worth it to learn web development.
I’d recommend some great books called Head First HTML i Head First Javascript, or some guides on this blog and other websites.