Angela Yu [patched] Access
The defining characteristic of Yu’s teaching method is its unapologetic embrace of structured, daily practice. The very format of “100 Days” is a psychological contract. By breaking the monolithic task of “learning to code” into 100 discrete, hour-long daily challenges, she dismantles the overwhelming fear of the blank page. Each day builds logically on the last, creating a spiral curriculum where concepts are introduced, reinforced, and then remixed in increasingly complex projects. This scaffolding is critical. A student doesn’t just learn about APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) in the abstract; on Day 33, they build a "Birthday Wisher" that sends automated emails. The theory is immediately absorbed into a tangible, functional outcome, solidifying knowledge through application rather than rote memorization.
They anchored. Jonah kept the engine low and fed the depth sounder a slow line of beeps. When they rowed in, the shore gave a scent of iron and lavender. On the beach lay glass beads threaded on seaweed and the skeletal remains of an old pole with rusted bells. An echoing cry—human, then not—trembled from stones. Angela felt the world fold small, like a map closing. angela yu
Today, she is recognized for "reshaping how people break into tech" by bridging the gap between absolute beginners and professional developers. Her teaching philosophy is rooted in the belief that anyone, regardless of their background, can master coding if given the right guidance and a touch of "geeky humor". Signature Courses and Curriculum The defining characteristic of Yu’s teaching method is
Unlike many "code tutors" who simply read slides, codes live. She makes mistakes on purpose —then shows you how to fix them. This is, according to learning psychology, the most effective way to teach debugging. If a teacher only shows perfect code, students panic when their screen turns red. Yu teaches that the red error message is a friend, not an enemy. Each day builds logically on the last, creating