A lot of answers are assuming that management, or coworkers, or the office culture are the problem. While I agree that that's possible, and even likely, sometimes it's not everybody else, it's you. The sense of anxiety and desperation conveyed by the question reminds me of a situation I once witnessed where a programmer just wasn't quite cutting it. He spent a lot of other people's time asking very basic questions and never really managed to produce anything on his own.
After trying a few different approaches to get this guy up to speed, management eventually lost patience with his lack of progress and gave him an assignment similar to yours: something fairly important with a strict, but reasonable, deadline and instructions not to bother the other developers unless absolutely necessary. They were trying to find out just what this guy was actually capable of as a programmer.
Ryan, I'm not trying to be mean, and I sincerely wish you the best, but you might want to consider the possibility that you're in a similar situation, and if so, treat this as an opportunity to prove yourself. If you've previously had access to other developers and spent a lot of time trying to get up to speed, you may be hitting the point where your employer expects you to be able to pull a little more of your own weight.
You say you're "getting very confused on some basic things", but don't let that throw you. Basic things are, by definition, basic, so you should be able to find good tutorials etc. Others have given good answers on how to proceed on the technical front, but if you suspect that this is some sort of evaluation, then the key is to respect other people's time and ask smart questions that demonstrate what you've learned or tried on your own. Good luck!