I'm interested in Ruby, Python, PHP and Java. Does programming training and consultancy the way I described exist for any of those programming languages? Is it good? Why? Is it on the internet? Where?
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The literal answers to your question are:
I suggest that you do a Google search to find a companies that offer training near you, then start comparing prices, class sizes, dates and curricula. Only once you have a short list is it worthwhile asking if people have done a particular course from a particular company and what they thought of it. Indeed, you may even be able to find (negative) references with a Google search. Checking out your local Universities, technical training colleges and/or adult education centres is another good option. You cannot necessarily judge the quality of a course by its price. The quality very much depends on the person / people who are presenting it. But for a low cost course, you can expect to have a much higher student-to-instructor ratio, less interaction with the instructor, less hands-on work and so on. Whether this matters to you depends on whether you really want to learn the language, or you mostly want a certificate. Finally, you always have the option of buying a text book and teaching yourself. Or doing an online tutorial. Or both. |
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There are certainly many training companies out there which provide programming training also to individuals. I'm not sure whether you are asking as a potential student or as a potential teacher; you should contact such training companies and find out about pricing. Most likely, you find that the pricing is too expensive for individual (private non-commercial) students. For these, you should really look into university-level education; many universities also allow participation of professionals who don't aim to gain a degree. In some countries, there are also public training schools targetted precisely at people (of all backgrounds) which don't seek a degree. Where these companies, universities, and organizations exist depends on the country where you live; I could recommend some for Germany (in which case I would also need to know the city where you live). |
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For self study of Java I would recommend the Sun Java Tutorial - http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/ - combined with Head First Java - http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596009205. This is probably the cheapest and most efficient way to get started. You will also find that the Java runtime is so large that it takes quite a while to be proficient and that you may want to pick a single language of those you are interested in to dive into. Personally I've stayed with Java as it would not be reasonable to introduce other languages at my work, and I learn these things as power tools for work :) |
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For Python, Mark Lutz does professional training - Python training. I know someone who participated in one of his classes in Colorado and enjoyed the one on one time with the instructor. They were very new to OO languages so I think the extra attention helped. I would also second the suggestion to check out university classes as I know many in the US teach Java as some of their core programming courses. |
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