Any full stack developers here? I’m self learning C and have done tons of projects and have a pretty good grasp on computer science and programming, and want to take it to the next step and want to learn something practical. Any advice for someone like me? What should I learn?
Should I learn the new frontend languages like react? Or should I stick with JS? Heard learning the newer frameworks and languages makes you better money nowadays.
react isnt a language retard. it's a framework for JS.
>self learning c if you cant even distinguish the above^ then doubt.jpg. Just learn javascript. The fuck do you need c for.
Christopher Scott
wrong forum but also think about a project you want to do and learn a language to realize it, not the other way around
Carter Ramirez
I have the same IKEA drawer that was recreated in Sims. It's pretty nice, shame they discontinued it because babies would tip it over.
Gavin Campbell
Buy link and holo faggot
Kevin Morgan
get into dev ops its better money
Wyatt Wilson
Lmao learning C in 2019
Take it from a guy who wasted years studying assembly and C, and coding low level systems, you’re screwing your self big time
Ryan Sanchez
Learn .NET and become a corporate consultancy whore
Joshua Howard
Just take a look at Spring Framework 5. It's Java/Kotlin which has a similar syntax to C. You can easily create a backend service that serves HTML templates through stuff like Thymeleaf.
Download the spring toolsuite or intellij ultimate if you're a richboi, go to start.spring.io/ and create a project to kick it off. Plenty of easy to follow getting started tutorials everywhere. You'll have your first webpage and server running in less than 30 minutes. In a week you can have a small cloud environment up and running on your local machine.
Kevin Lopez
Sorry man, been only programming for about 4 months now. Tbh, don’t really have an idea what frameworks are, or how higher level languages even work. I’m confident with c and have done a lot of projects using data structures, algorithms, etc.
But like I said, I want to start making more practical things and idk what to start. I want to make a career from this, and being a full stack developer or engineer is the route I wanna do. I just don’t know where to start.
I was heavily convinced C is a good way to learn the fundamentals of computer science and programming in general. Good way to learn data structures, algorithms, libraries, compilers, etc.
Chase Kelly
Most programmers I know who used to code in C avoid it these days. Learn Rust if you want to be close to the hardware, Python if you want to be high level with a focus on automation/generalization, Javascript if you want to be a web dev, or C# if you want to create desktop and enterprise applications.
Xavier Murphy
I understand c isn’t useful for a full stack developer, but if you read what I said before, i only was learning it to understand computer science and programming. Please understand, I didn’t know a thing about computers before I started learning c.
Elijah Martinez
Embedded programming fren, unless you wanna relearn a new framework every two years to keep ahead of people abroad who work for way cheaper
Jacob Gonzalez
So was I m8. So was I
But it’s just a unnecessary rabbit hole that you will get lost inside. Th real skill is in applying high level languages not in deep understanding I’m afraid
Ethan Evans
low level is still good knowledge its just harder to apply because most of the details have been abstracted.
Jayden Robinson
It’s what I’m starting to realize lmao. I’m at the point where I need to know applicable stuff now
Christopher Gray
Learn Angular 7+ and Spring Boot. You don't need literally anything else. You can get a job with just those 2 very VERY easily.
Carter Parker
>I want to start making more practical things and idk what to start. If you can do three red ones within a month you can confidently apply to FAANG+M even if all you know is C
Jesus why C are you making an operating system from scratch
Elijah Long
See
Dominic Cox
i understand completely i started with a C book 15 years ago now i code a bunch of languages. the key is, dont give up. and always keep an open mind
Thomas Diaz
Can confirm. Angular/react are mainly used for presentation-layer applications these days.
Joseph Martin
Saw a udemy course for these two. Worth buying? Or can I get enough experience googling? The udemy course is only $12, might save me some time
Landon Barnes
You don't need any sort of schooling or academy. Googling gives you enough information for you to become fully competent.
Michael Ward
based malm
Aaron Long
And would you recommend me learning a more basic front end language and framework or should I just jump straight into that? Keep in mind, I’m sort of a brainlet ;_;
Zachary Anderson
Breh, just make a spring boot project and run it. You can download entire "getting started" projects that have been built already for you as a starting point. After that you just start adding stuff one by one. Start with hello world, worry about client-side programming later.
Jonathan Murphy
typescript
thank me later
Landon Kelly
Don't learn React. Every $3/hr Indian on Earth knows React, you cannot compete. Find a niche.