This Java fundamentals course provides complete coverage of the Java programming language giving you the strong language foundation required for any Java-based development environment.
Whether targeting a client-based, server-side, or Android environment, this course provides you with everything you need to quickly ramp up and become an effective Java programmer.
These fundamentals do not really change from one version to the next. It is the advanced features that the EF Core team is evolving. The course is still totally relevant for EF Core 7 and you can use EF Core 7 to work through the course.
In fact, I have updated every single project from the course to EF Core 7 and except for one small tweak (not even related to EF Core) in the API Testing demo (from Module 13), every demo ran exactly the same in EF Core 7 as it does in EF Core 6.
Because of the course length and the fact that EF Core 7 is not a Long-Term Support (LTS) version, Pluralsight and I decided not to update this course. Many of the EF Core and ASP.NET core courses went the same way.
Angular is the most broadly accepted framework for building front-end applications. This course will teach you the fundamentals of Angular needed to create professional Angular applications, including components, services, routing, APIs, and testing.
Angular has become one of the most widely used web development frameworks. In this course, Angular Fundamentals, you'll learn all of the fundamentals of building applications with Angular. First, you will explore how to create an application and how to build pages and reusable elements using Angular components and the Angular template syntax. Then, you'll learn the fundamentals of routing and navigation, creating reusable services, building forms to handle user input, communicating with server APIs using HTTP, organizing your project with Angular modules, and testing Angular applications. When you finish this course, you will have the fundamental knowledge necessary to create professional and personal websites using Angular.
Jim Cooper is a software developer at Pluralsight, with more than 20 years of software development experience. He has a passion for Agile processes, especially lean software development. Jim has been developing production Angular apps since before Angular version 1.0, including Pluralsight's first Html5-based video player. Jim has over 10 years of TDD and pair programming experience which has contributed significantly to his professional development. He has successfully mentored other developers... more in the use of TDD and agile practices and still enjoys learning from talented developers everywhere.
Joe began his love of programming on an Apple III in BASIC. Although his preferred language is JavaScript, he has worked professionally with just about every major Microsoft language. He is currently a consultant and full time author for Pluralsight. Joe has always had a strong interest in education, and has worked both full and part time as a technical teacher for over ten years. He is a frequent blogger and speaker, organizer of ng-conf, the AngularJS conference (www.ng-conf.org), and a paneli... morest on the JavaScript Jabber podcast ( )
DevOps is taking the world by storm, but the often overlooked part is that keeping applications secure is increasingly important. So how do you keep your entire development chain secure and within compliance? This path answers that question by showing you the fundamentals of DevSecOps and keeping your CI/CD pipelines safe while incorporating security best practices into your DevOps lifecycle.
Back in 2018 the community considered whether Pluralsight's Skill IQ tests were of relevance or value to Stack Overflow (Pluralsight IQ credibility). Part of the discussion noted that an ongoing dialog between Stack Overflow and Pluralsight had the potential to improve the quality of the tests.
This test does not measure my expertise in Node.js at all! It does not cover any of the fundamentals of Node.js programming. It instead asks trivia questions about the APIs of unrelated third-party libraries (MongoDB Node.js driver, Sinon.JS), trivia about rarely used APIs you'd just look up if you need to use (I would and I code-reviewed a lot of them myself) etc.
There was only one incorrect question/answer and 1/2 questions that were absolute trivia but the test overall covered reasonable topics (closures/prototypes/primitive-object-duality etc) as well as some asynchronisity concepts (like promise API).
I would have designed the test differently personally but I think it's a fair assessment of someone's JavaScript knowledge. This surprised me enough to post a separate answer since I feel that good feedback is also important.
Postman is used by over 3 million developers across the world. This course will show you the fundamentals of Postman, how you can issue requests, create automated API tests, and even document your API with Postman.
When working with an API there's always so much to remember, such as any special API keys, different URLs for different environments, as well as the shape that each request should take.
In this course, Postman Fundamentals, you'll learn how Postman can help simplify working with an API. It allows you to use variables so that the same request works whether it's in the testing or staging environment.
You'll also learn how you can create automated API tests so that you ensure your API doesn't break between releases. You'll even see how Postman simplifies writing documentation for your API, so that your users can have an up-to-date explanation of what your API is doing.
By the end of this course, you'll know the ins and outs of Postman, and be equipped to maximize your interactions with APIs.
Nate's first program was written in QBasic on an 8086 clone his dad built. Since then he's written applications in C++, .NET, and Node.js. He spent the first 12 years of his career writing Windows applications before transitioning to write applications for the web. Regardless of the language or type of application he's written, he strives for writing clean, testable, and maintainable code. In addition to his day job as a developer, Nate also enjoys speaking at various conferences. He will typica... morelly be found talking about topics such as TDD, clean code, or professionalism.
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