Don't subscribe to /u/PrettyCoolGuy13 his udemy course on HTML/CSS. More info inside.

I haven't taken the course but let me explain why this entire post is bullshit. Every "error" that OP has listed are all examples of the author not following best practices. The problem is that I highly doubt that this class is about best practices - in fact I'm pretty sure it's about the fundamentals of HTML and CSS, in which case who fucking cares if OP didn't follow every single best practice to the letter (using bold tags instead of doing it in CSS? are you fucking kidding me!)

And the examples given by OP as errors are really not that egregious. You will see this kind of coding all the time in the wild, and likely in your office, and likely you will write this kind of code as well, no matter how well schooled you are in best practices, because it really doesn't fucking matter 99% of the time whether or not you follow these kinds of best practices to the T. And of all the kinds of errors you will see out there in the wild, these kinds of "mistakes" are absolutely the least of your worries. Perhaps it's not the best way in the entire world to build this website, but it's totally functional and it uses techniques that lots of professionals use in the real world.

Pay no mind to OP.

I don't necessarily endorse people paying for this particular course, but all of the points that OP has raised are fucking idiotic and are absolutely no grounds for public shaming or for trying to hurt someone's new online business.

If OP cares this much about how HTML and CSS should be taught, they should build their own series of online tutorials which can compete with the author's instead of trying to delegitimize this author by coming onto a subreddit whose majority of users probably don't know HTML and CSS well enough to understand what OP is writing.

If OP had the slightest shred of best intentions he might have made this post read as a list of improvements that could be made to this website instead of as some dire consumer warning.

/r/learnprogramming Thread