Write something
Anything you want
something !
You can start with the common projects like library management,School Management System, bank system management, etc
There's a lot. I wouldn't recommend making Spring projects if you haven't made any with java core. And, to be honest, there are just many project ideas that would help you improve and test your java core skills: - tictactoe - text analyzer app (how many letters / words etc) - basic ciphers - apps that use sorting / pathfinding / collections & data structures you haven't learned yet or don't feel to familiar with just yet. Some apps with a database: - employee / student tracker - book / song / video library You could, for fun and if you're not in a rush, try to develop a swing / javafx desktop app. Keep in mind java is rarely used to make desktop apps, but it's fun practice, because you can combine frontend & backend skills. If you're confident enough and have some projects, then you could definitely try Spring already.
Can you suggest some kind of youtube lecture for this java core skills ?
I have a negative opinion of learning java with youtube, sorry. There are tons of great tutorials you can read through without wasting your time, though.
Suggest the great one
Tutorialspoint, javatpoint, geeksforgeeks
+1, I'm also not a fan of video tutorials. They work fine as overview or introduction when you're already on advanced level with adjacent areas. But I've never seen any video tutorial that can teach you. Mostly because of lack of methodology (maybe wrong word, English is not my first language) - correct order of material and correct depth
Yes, totally agreed. -There's often little or no structure to them. - A lot of time is wasted. I'd read through a part I know or understand already much faster than scroll the video to find the next important part. - error-prone content
This may sound crazy... But I would suggest to try to apply to a job. Nothing makes you grow faster than working on something real and with the team. Even if you fail to find a job, you'll get experience of going to interviews. Based on this info you can correct your learning plan to match to what is really needed for open positions. But if you get lucky, you'll get best learning opportunity. Much better than sitting at home and trying to learn something isolated, in vacuum, by yourself only.
Well, my suggestion of course depends on what is understood under "java basics". Couple of first introductory chapters won't get you a job, most probably
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