Legacy Courses vs Current Courses

I took a bit of a break following some life changes. Trying to get back in the swing of things, I’m working on one of the Responsive Web Design courses, and I have 3 of the required projects left.

Well last week while on vacation, I decided to work on some of the courses, but didn’t have my notebook that has my project stuff in it. So I started browsing some courses and found a legacy Responsive Web Design courses that I had already started on. I finished it, went to claim certificate and it doesn’t have the button in settings.

Got to looking around some more, found another legacy Responsive Web Design course, this one is the one I remember starting about 3 years ago, it shows first required projects done, second one not done and if I click the second one, it takes me to the most recent Responsive Web Design course (the one I have everything done except the tech doc and the last 2 required projects). This is how it reflects in the course and in settings, if I look at the current and not legacy versions.

I also noticed a legacy JavaScript course I did holds my cert still, while a new (but still in archive section) is available, with looks like similar problems (based off the names). I’m assuming I can proceed with the newer web design course as the other is obsolete. Also, much point in going for the newer JS cert? I feel the time would be better invested in actual projects for a portfolio, or another course (i.e. finishing the web design, doing the full stack course, being as I already have the JS cert). Opinions and/or advice?

The Full Stack course is the recommended curriculum now. It’s the most up to date and being actively worked on.

Some of the labs and workshops in there were part of the old courses and might already be fully or partially completed by you.

Ahh, yes I was also curious if already finished portions persisted through to the next version of the course.

if you have already completed projects that have been used in the full stack curriculum, they will be marked as completed in the full stack curriculum

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