The Brad’s ability to explain technical things is UN-BE-LI-VA-BLE!!!!!!!!! In just 35 minutes, he delivers WAY MORE than lots of videos here on RU-vid with hours of explanation. This guy is phenomenal!!!!! I wanna buy a Next course from you!!!!
I totally agree.. there is more content in this video than many hours of videos in all youtube about nextjs.. Thank you Brad, your courses are always the best
Awesome! I was so afraid of Next.js because of React but I now see it's easier. I've only developed in PHP and deployed to a shared hosting, so I have a question, is Next.js a totally different world that requires a different kind of hosting??
Good question! You can configure Next.js to "build" or "output" a 100% static version of your site, and that can live on traditional basic shared hosting. However, if you want the server-side or dynamic aspects of Next.js then yes, it needs its own Node environment / hosting. Vercel and Netlify both have generous free hosting options, or if you're willing to pay, you could configure your own VPS or use Docker etc...
@@LearnWebCode Hey Brad. Several Plesk shared hostings offer Node.js and Laravel installation options out of the box. Any chance for a quick tutorial on how to use them as an alternative to VPS deployment you described on Section 15 of your Laravel course on Udemy?
Hey Brad, thank you for an amazing nextjs video! Is the TS something you ever consider for learning projects in the future ? It seems to me that you don’t Particularly like it 🤷🏻♂️🤔🙄
Good question! I don't dislike TypeScript, but TypeScript feels like an opinion, and I try to keep my lessons as opinion-free as possible. If someone is already scared of Next.js, then including TypeScript is only going to make them even more scared. If I was leading a team of multiple developers, absolutely, TypeScript would be a good opinion to force. But in the the education space I think keeping things as basic or unflavored as possible is best; I want as few things getting in the way of learning the topic at hand.
Hello Brad! I am your student, i registered fullstack JavaScript, mySQL, Reacct for the rest of us and lastly the recent course titled become a web dev. 2024. My question is that did you use the same backend code for fullstack JavaScript in the React to the rest of us? Because i noticed that you have not highlighted or give us full guide on the backend code in React to the rest of us course.
Hello! The backend in the React course is very, very similar to the Full Stack JS course. The only big difference is in the React's backend, everything is setup as stateless / REST / JSON endpoints instead of assuming the browser environment like HTML / cookies will be available. I can't make any official promises because I need to give a few other courses my attention first, but eventually, I think it would be cool if I added a new chapter to the React course where we used Next.js and rebuilt not just the front-end, but built the backend together, all using Next.js. Of course that would be a huge update, so even if I can commit to it, it wouldn't be any time soon. But would that be something you'd be interested in?
Indeed that would be something I will be interested be interested in. How I wish it would be any moment soon! But I trust you will one day make it for us. Thank you sir Brad!
Great question, I'm going to redo my website again soon to explain the difference. My platform and bundle comes with access to a small Discord community. Sometimes I make less than a dollar per sale on Udemy so I can't offer very much 1 on 1 direct support over there; other than watching for bugs and things that need to be updated over time. Also, buying from my platform gives you access to not only the 4 current courses in its bundle, but any new future courses I release moving forward. My ultimate goal is to not only have all 9 of my current courses in the bundle, but also any new courses I release over the years. As of April 2024, I haven't built the bundle's value to be undeniable yet, so the best bang for your buck is probably still just one individual course on Udemy during a big coupon sale. But if I can get enough courses in my bundle and a cohesive path of which courses to take in which order + a Discord community, I think the value will be there. I've been on Udemy since 2014 so it'll be a long journey for me to not be so dependent on it, but that's my long term goal.
@@LearnWebCode Damn boss thanks for replying. yeah I heard udemy just treats instructors very poorly, typical corporate world behavior where your efforts don't mean anything. I'll try to support via your own platform then, keep it up man.
Dear brad, me and a lot of my friends have watched your tutorials and it started our whole career. I have visited your website to take your full courses but unfortunately our country is sanctioned( iran) and none of the payment methods are available . Please accept crypto currency like USDT so we could be able to get the full tutorial. Thank you ❤
Hey Brad, Need your advice. People says php is now old fashioned language. I am a WordPress and PHP developer. Should I change my domain to JS or Java or Python? What do you say? Please reply. 🙏
Wordpress dev here :D. Modern worpress using both js and PHP. Worth to learn also react to build custom blocks and have basic json knowledge for theme.json file. Nowadays you can make a lot of thins using Wordpress ;)
I think when people talk badly about PHP it's mostly motivated by one of two things: (1) They're thinking about PHP from 2001 as if that's how PHP still is in 2024 and/or (2) They're jealous that PHP has more market/usage share than their favorite language. WordPress, Laravel, countless other systems + plain custom coded PHP sites power a staggering percentage of the entire web. If you Google "big sites that use PHP" you'll see what I mean. I think somewhere near 79% of all websites rely on PHP. And the language is actively maintained, receiving updates, and getting better each year. If you're intrinsically motivated to learn other languages that's great, but if you're just wondering if PHP is still a "good" choice for web development and job opportunities, 100% I'd stick with PHP.
@@LearnWebCode 100% agree with you brad, it's all about how we adopt the language. PHP along with JS frameworks, we can do wonders and also we should not forget about how powerful Laravel is. Thank you for your great content.
Hi, Brad perfect video what do you feel about the rise of AI Concerning web development and what is your opinion about the recently launched Devin AI software engineer? Is Web Development Future Is In Trouble?
It would be nice if you answered your messages. I've PM'd you on Facebook and sent you a number of emails over the past two weeks and no reply. I thought I'd try here of all places as I see that you're replying to posts.