> recently started to learn another language with Duolingo
Duolingo feels great when you're starting. You feel like you make a lot of progress quickly, and it's fun, so you do it every day. Before you know it, you've done it for half a year, and then you try to talk to somebody and realize that you've learned very little.
>the traditional "keep learning all the different grammar combinations first"
Yes, this is also a bad approach. They're both bad.
Duolingo feels great when you're starting. You feel like you make a lot of progress quickly, and it's fun, so you do it every day. Before you know it, you've done it for half a year, and then you try to talk to somebody and realize that you've learned very little.
>the traditional "keep learning all the different grammar combinations first"
Yes, this is also a bad approach. They're both bad.