yeah part of the problem is that most guides
- (a) are hilariously outdated,
- (b) cover only some fraction of what you need to know (web dev has a lot of parts to it) which is useless on its own,
- © stop after beginner stuff so you’re left figuring out anything practical yourself,
- (d) just plain suck anyway
hence my desire to write a book that can turn someone into a programmer, not into a person who knows CSS but has no context for how that relates to anything else.