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how long were you studying before you were able to make a professional looking page for a client?

I'm not sure I know what in doing. I need answers

28th Jan 2018, 9:40 PM
Philip Simmons
Philip Simmons - avatar
5 Answers
+ 4
my first professional page was in 1999. It was a single page that sold Viagra. It was just a bunch of well fo rmed links that directed you to a pharmacy. Image links and text links I had 3 clients in the same gig. Made some serious cash off of them. I dominated the top 10 search results in Google for the keyword phrase "buy Viagra". Then one day they were all gone from the search results and my revenue took a serious hit. Someone reported me to Google for using css to hide text on the page. lol Took me 2 months to learn HTML and css. I look back and wonder why it took so long. Probably smoking too much weed. ja
29th Jan 2018, 2:46 AM
Tim Millar
Tim Millar - avatar
+ 1
I would say about five to six months for me personally studying web page development, I started to make a few professional looking Pages for a handful of clients. However, not everybody learns at the same pace. What exactly are you uncertain over? Perhaps I could be of some assistance.
29th Jan 2018, 2:39 AM
Michelangelo
Michelangelo - avatar
+ 1
I am not a professional.. so fair warning haha, but I can definitely add to this topic. I think it's best to master one language before moving onto another. Otherwise things will get confusing. I have been looking into starting a blog recently. Hoping to get a website up and rolling soon, but mostly doing research so far. Honestly, it all depends on your goals. If you intend to market products through a blog or website, you're on the right track. As far as I'm concerned you should know as much about html and css as you can to create a page so that you don't have to pay for someone's template or design. That way when you do go to get a site up and running, the only cost involved should really be domain and web hosting. On another hand, using just html and css, you could create and sell templates to prospective customers for their websites if that's a route you choose to go. That's what I have come to love about coding, pretty much everything is up to you! If you need some other resources w3schools.com is another phenomenal place to learn code. They go a little more in depth on a lot of subjects but you can still practice everything you learn in the code playground on here. Good luck!
3rd Feb 2018, 2:36 PM
Brittnay
Brittnay - avatar
0
I mostly want to do html and css... but I kno ill have to do a complete site sooner or later and I'm not sure of what has to be known to do that. and I'm sure it's a job by job basis as to the knowledge needed but it's there something I should be working on more so than something else
29th Jan 2018, 3:30 AM
Philip Simmons
Philip Simmons - avatar
0
for me it was around five months.Also You might want to look studying PHP or Ruby after you conformable with HTML and CSS.
30th Jan 2018, 4:32 PM
LeeRoy Posey
LeeRoy Posey - avatar