PracticeCraft / roadmap

Roadmap for collaborative learning and building project
MIT License
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Roadmap

Why does this exist?

Throughout my coding journey I've come across a ton of resources for people that are brand new and want to learn. Those usually cover the basics but leave out a lot of the deep details and the realities of building projects - how to work past problems, how to break things up, how to work on a larger codebase or a codebase others are also working on.

I've also come across a ton of reference style materials and "getting started" guides that are geared toward more experienced programmers and assume a deeper knowledge of the domain. These are great once you have your feet under you as they allow for faster location and parsing of the information you need.

What appears to be missing is the stuff in the middle. A novice programmer that has been doing tutorials is spoon fed what they need to know a step at a time. It's up to the teacher to set the pace and decide when and how a project comes together. When the student gets through the project and wants to start making things on their own, they get stuck. An empty editor screen is intimidating, and suddenly the scope of what they want to do overwhelms them.

What do I hope to accomplish?

I see a chance to help here. The best way I can see this happening is with a more interactive approach. It would inlude:

How would this work?

I see a few things that would need to be in place for this to start working.

Target audience

I foresee two audiences for this. The first is newer devs looking to work on the skills required to work in a team and be part of projects that are larger in scope. The second is devs with more experience that are willing to provide time and mentoring in making the community work, and keeping projects moving forward.

Possible pitfalls

The first thing that comes to mind is there will probably be some minimal costs involved. What I don't want to have happen, is for those costs to be passed along to the community. Initially I would probably have to shoulder the cost for DNS registration and whatever would be required for a community to function. Github is free, however the other platforms used might have a fee involved. However it ended up working, I would want to make sure that people without the money to spend would still have access - nothing like Patreon or a premium subscription model. The free tier is the whole thing.

The second thing that comes up is how to attract the people with the experience. I need to figure out how to market this whole thing if it makes it to launch.

I don't know if this could be big enough to support languages other than english. I don't have direct experience, but it has to be frustrating for people who's first language isn't english to have to learn it in order to be a part of the programming world.