Should Developers Learn Multiple Programming Languages?
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- Опубликовано: 10 фев 2025
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Congrats on 200k! Ruby fans are furious.
🤣
The Ruby Liberation Front has closed it's embassy in Montreal I hear.
Congrats on hitting the 200k mark. Best Dev teacher ever.👨🏻🏫
Thanks!
I prefer to learn concepts because the technology and tooling I use tends to change faster than my ability to master any of them.
Always learn concepts ... tools change. The fundamentals don't.
It is important to have a professional understanding of the primary skillset. Baking a cake is not about grilling meat even though both are food for sale. Be really good at something first and then branch out.
my take: it's great to learn multiple programming languages...it'll help develop your software engineering skills, problem solving skills and equip you with multiple tools to tackle different challenges you will encounter in your career. But employers honestly abuse this fact and expect you to know every-fucking-thing! I am a full stack developer focusing on MERN + Golang and I recently applied for a 'front end react developer role' but I got disqualified after failing their python technical interview! FFS!
that's just because the interview process is broken and they ask you some dumb ds&a question rather than something pertaining to your job.
@Peter Brown what? you can't communicate somebody unless they can regurgitate bubble sort? it's funny when recruiters make these absurd statements to justify their dated interview practices... i'm very skilled in the DS&A domain and i admit it's only useful in tech interviews and niche programming situations. i need to hire programmers for a business. our goal is to make money. my focus is on their ability to output high quality work that we can actually ship. i still think everybody should learn DS&A, but it's a terrible metric to use for hiring. this is all pretty objective and its the consensus i've seen from pretty much every other experienced developer i've discussed this with.
@Peter Brown i think you're miscommunicating your point then. i just stated that i also expect all developers to understand the intricacies of data structures, and yes, they should be able to talk in big-o algorithmic complexity. none of this means we should use leetcode to hire people. the DS&A knowledge you're requesting takes weeks to learn whereas the actual job will take years of practice before the developer is useful to a company.
@Peter Brown if it takes anybody more than a few weeks to understand ds/big-o, they're in the wrong field. i'm a senior level engineer and *some* of the best people i've worked with didn't have degrees. i suppose i wouldn't know if they have full undergraduate degree knowledge because most of that knowledge doesn't come up too frequently on the job of full stack web development. i agree with your final point about people thinking there's some shortcut to becoming a master, which there isn't. it requires years, and there's no way around that. im not advocating for hiring unexperienced devs. i just think the leetcode questions are a bad choice for most companies. better to analyze the candidates open source work and have them solve problems that would let you gauge their actual skills in my humble opinion.
@Peter Brown you didnt address any of my points but im sure if i asked some of the more jr members of my team they'd agree with you
hey !! anyone who is seeing this man's advises are gold
It looked like a drone locking in on target. 🤯 👍🤟 thx stef.🙂
Congrats OG 200k
If it helps Dell has me using Java for the back end and Typescript for the client side. You have to use what they say
I’d suggest to follow:
-learn linux basics commands and git
-cloud frameworks (aws,google cloud, azure)
-then learn any programming and frameworks
Really? Damn I was going the other way around, learning programming and then cloud frameworks
Linux already knew it cause fuck Windows so I guess I'm on good in that area
What do we do with Git and cloud services if we don't have at least a small project/app written in any language or tools ? AWS provides interesting services like LightSail, RDS, Elastic Bean Talk which require us to have a project, although just a small project written in tools like Html, CSS and JS.
@@lexsoft3969 Yea im sorry but his list is wrong lol
im a professional software engineer and this is terrible advice. cloud frameworks are pretty low priority.
Thanks stef congo for 200k 😄
I think a good developer should be familiar with different programming paradigms.
Now you can make a full Ruby course as a 200k celebration hahahaha
Sounds like a plan!
Only one properly.
Thanks
should I learn English to get the perfect lvl in it. Im Russian. And I think that i've got advanced lvl in it. And i wonder should I increase my English till Fluent. It seems to me I've no accent, I've talled a lot to English man from Britannia and he likes the way I speak now. Presently I try to read a lot , for example, about two hours every day of fiction
More English the better because it is the international language of commerce.
@@StefanMischook Thanks to the British Empire! Hurrah!
Sir, what do you have to say to someone that's got some experience in wed dev and is considering learning Ruby?
there are better choices for backend languages in 2021. i'd only learn it if you specifically need it for a role/project.
@@kurtm9744 I'm not saying it's objectively bad, I was speaking from a more general perspective whereas it's not as popular as a lot of other choices so there are less jobs, developers, and overall online resources. i've written some ruby and its very impressive and expressive but the resources online compared to django or laravel are lacking. another thing to note is that ruby's philosophy of having multiple ways to do the same thing doesn't lend itself well to real world projects and code readability/consistency. with great power comes great responsibility i guess. i'll still like your comment because i agree rails is insanely quick to build with.
I’m currently learning JavaScript right now. I feel interested to learn Python as well. Should I wait to become proficient in JavaScript before I decide to touch Python or can I learn both in the same time ?
My personal take would be to stick with javascript, then python will come easy enough. If you're a student and going to go into software engineering, I find it hurts to practice multiple languages while learning how to do leetcode style problem and learning basic Data stuctures and algorithms. Once you learn javascript, you'll know programming and that should allow you to learn any language.
I wouldn’t try and jump language to language before understanding one well,
Python is very easy. You can do both.
OG programmer
congratulation 🎉
200k ? probably 98 percent of them are dead by now given his advanced age 169 years ...jokes aside give me 200 k comments if I am wrong.