It depends.
I mean, for like 10 bucks it’s cool. If you’re able to progress linearly and fill in the gaps.
Not necessarily a course for a super novice even though you could pull it off if you were dedicated enough.
I could see someone like myself doing it. But someone who isn’t technically savvy or willing to google things to figure out what doesn’t work and how to do things. You also have to be able to sift through a lot of technical jargon BS online to find simple answers to your questions.
The course is akin to a software dev job where you’re kind of liven the materials you need and are thrown into the deep end everyday.
Takes a lot for you to fill in the gaps as things progress. It’s a good challenge tho, if you don’t take it too seriously and linearly.
You’re gonna run into hurdles and hiccups. I’d recommend you have something like this where you have people who are actually experienced to review your code and answer questions.
The course itself also has a question feature for each lesson and a lot of diff solutions and pieces of advice are shared there.