Become a Full-Stack Beginner in 90 Days
Learn frontend development, backend basics, databases, and deployment — enough to build and ship complete web applications.
Free for 7 days. No credit card required.
No credit card required
Your Plan
Foundations
Weeks 1-4
Build & Ship
Weeks 5-10
Full-Stack & Portfolio
Weeks 11-14
The Plan
90 Days plan
21 tasks across 5 milestones — 8-12/week
HTML, CSS & JavaScript Core
Weeks 1-3- Build 3 responsive static websites with HTML and CSS
- Master JavaScript fundamentals including ES6+ syntax
- Learn DOM manipulation and build 2 interactive JavaScript projects
- Set up Git workflow and push all projects to GitHub
Advanced JavaScript & React
Weeks 4-6- Learn async JavaScript, closures, and higher-order functions
- Complete React fundamentals: components, hooks, state management
- Build a React dashboard app with multiple views and API integration
- Learn React Router and client-side navigation patterns
- Write your first unit tests with Jest or Vitest
Backend Foundations
Weeks 7-9- Learn Node.js and Express.js fundamentals
- Build a REST API with CRUD endpoints
- Introduction to databases: SQL basics with PostgreSQL or MongoDB
- Connect your React frontend to your own backend API
- Learn environment variables and basic security practices
Full-Stack Project
Weeks 10-12- Design and plan a full-stack application (task manager, blog, or marketplace)
- Implement user authentication (JWT or session-based)
- Build the complete frontend and backend with database integration
- Deploy the full-stack app to Vercel/Railway/Render
- Write comprehensive documentation and README
Portfolio & Job Readiness
Week 13- Polish portfolio website with 4-5 deployed projects
- Practice explaining your projects and technical decisions
Obstacles
What gets in the way
Common challenges and how to overcome them
Challenge
Tutorial hell — watching videos without retaining anything
Solution
Follow the 70/30 rule: spend 30% of your time on lessons and 70% building projects. After each concept, immediately apply it in a small project before moving on.
Challenge
Choosing the wrong language or framework to start with
Solution
Start with JavaScript (web) or Python (general purpose/data). Both have massive communities, beginner resources, and job markets. Do not switch languages until you are comfortable building basic projects in one.
Challenge
Getting stuck on errors and not knowing how to debug
Solution
Debugging is a core skill, not a failure. Learn to read error messages, use console.log/print statements strategically, and search Stack Overflow effectively. Join a community (Discord, Reddit) where you can ask for help.
Challenge
Feeling overwhelmed by how much there is to learn
Solution
You do not need to learn everything. Focus on one stack and go deep. A junior developer who knows HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and one framework well is far more effective than someone who superficially touched 10 technologies.
Challenge
Losing motivation when progress feels slow
Solution
Track your wins — every bug you fix and feature you ship is progress. Build projects you actually care about. Milestone-based planning makes progress visible even when the learning curve feels steep.
Challenge
Not knowing when you are ready to apply for jobs or freelance
Solution
You are ready when you can build a complete project from scratch (not following a tutorial), explain your code decisions, and debug issues independently. Aim for 3-5 portfolio projects that demonstrate different skills.
1.4M
Unfilled developer jobs in the US by 2029
70%
Of learning time should be spent building
$85K
Median salary for entry-level web developers
3-5
Portfolio projects needed to be job-ready
FAQ
Common questions
For web development, start with HTML/CSS and JavaScript — they run in every browser and have the broadest job market. For data science or automation, Python is the best starting point. Both languages have excellent beginner resources and large communities.
With focused full-time study (6-8 hours/day), most bootcamp graduates are job-ready in 3-6 months. Part-time learners (1-2 hours/day) typically need 9-18 months. The key variables are consistency, project complexity, and networking effort.
No. Many professional developers are self-taught or bootcamp graduates. Employers increasingly value portfolios and practical skills over credentials. A CS degree helps with certain roles (systems programming, algorithms-heavy positions), but it is not required for most web and application development jobs.
Self-learning works if you are disciplined and can follow a structured curriculum. Bootcamps provide accountability, mentorship, and career support. A structured self-study plan with milestone tracking gives you bootcamp-level structure without the cost.
Build 3-5 projects of increasing complexity: a personal site, a CRUD application (to-do list, blog), an API integration project, a full-stack app with authentication, and ideally one project that solves a real problem you care about. Quality over quantity.
Minimum 1 hour of focused coding (not watching videos) per day for steady progress. 2-3 hours is ideal for part-time learners. More than 4 hours of intense coding often leads to diminishing returns — take breaks and let concepts consolidate.
AI tools like Copilot are making developers more productive, not replacing them. Understanding how to architect systems, debug issues, and translate business requirements into code remains essential. Learning to code with AI assistance is the new baseline skill.
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