Re: [racket-users] resources for learning JS / React?

2020-02-15 Thread 'John Clements' via Racket Users
Belatedly: awesome, many thanks! John > On Jan 27, 2020, at 02:39, Sean Kemplay wrote: > > > This is a good (free) course that takes you the lates best practices of JS > (getting more functional), react and then react native. > >

Re: [racket-users] resources for learning JS / React?

2020-01-27 Thread Hendrik Boom
Just wondering: Is there a #lang for javascript? -- hendrik -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Racket Users" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to racket-users+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view

Re: [racket-users] resources for learning JS / React?

2020-01-26 Thread Jens Axel Søgaard
If he is using React for a new project, I suggest using React Hooks. React Hooks were introduced in 2018 and "feels more functional" than their previous approach. https://reactjs.org/docs/hooks-intro.html /Jens Axel Den søn. 26. jan. 2020 kl. 18.12 skrev 'John Clements' via Racket Users <

Re: [racket-users] resources for learning JS / React?

2020-01-26 Thread 'John Clements' via Racket Users
Many thanks! These look good. John Clements > On Jan 26, 2020, at 05:15, Darren Newton wrote: > > For learning JavaScript these two resources are very good: > > Eloquent JavaScript https://eloquentjavascript.net/ > You Don't Know JS https://github.com/getify/You-Dont-Know-JS > > The tutorial

[racket-users] resources for learning JS / React?

2020-01-25 Thread 'John Clements' via users-redirect
I have a graduate student that wants a self-guided introduction to JS and React. The problem here, to some degree, is that there are so *many* introductions. Does anyone here have specific references that might be helpful? (Say, e.g., if Gregor Kiczales did a JS course on coursera… that would