RE: Update your keys - If need be

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From what I have read, at lest having an understanding of full stack development will be beneficial to learning both front and back end. Clearly I don't know the answers, or hell even the questions to ask yet. Thank you very much for offering to help me learn! The only stuff I have any experience with JS, Lua, and some html as far as programing. However, I do have a pretty good understand of electrical systems and how transistors (aka relays) do math. The problem I keep running into is everything I think of to start trying to program would be easier for me to just build with mechanical parts.



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Believe it or not, I actually understand. My problem is I always had the want and the drive, but never anything to do. It wasn't until @ecoinstant gave me some direction that I really started to thrive.

Yes, if it's understanding you want, I would at least look into fullstack. It gives you a taste of both, and you will find out you prefer one or the other. I learned very quickly I hate frontend work. I'm not artistic, I can't "design" things that look good, etc. But I love backend work. I feel right at home.

Having some JS and Lua under your belt will help actually a lot. Fundamentally most languages are similar, other than syntax differences.

RE: The original post, If you are wanting to see something that fundamentally does the same thing but on the frontend side. I worked on this the last two days: Hive Key Changer and you can find the source for it here, now it doesn't use keychain as keychain doesn't sign things with owner keys, which is what is required for key change, but you can see some other examples of keychain use in that same repo.

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lolz! I was about to read that post when the notification popped up that you replied.

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