It's Elm specific. This class is offered in first year and in first 
semester so there are no pre-requisites. But there obviously feels like 
there are prequisites because I'm totally lost.

On Sunday, October 23, 2016 at 5:56:54 PM UTC-4, OvermindDL1 wrote:
>
> Elm is definitely a front-end language for javascript so it does assume at 
> least a little prior experience, at least with html/css and how they work 
> if not javascript (depending on what you need to do).  The class does not 
> have those pre-requisites first?  Is it Elm specific or just a generic 
> functional language of which you could pick another?
>
>
> On Sunday, October 23, 2016 at 3:22:22 PM UTC-6, Razi Syed wrote:
>>
>> Hi everyone, I've never programmed before and in my first year course 
>> we're doing Elm. The prof expects us to learn Elm on our own, and simply 
>> does examples in class applying what he thinks we should have learned. 
>> Problem is, I'm totally lost. Some people are telling me you're supposed to 
>> know HTML and CSS before Elm. Even the official elm guide seems like it 
>> assumes you know HTML and CSS and javascript (note: I simply know the names 
>> of these languages and nothing about them), or have programmed in a 
>> non-functional programming.
>>
>

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