Thanks :)

On Wednesday, November 14, 2018 at 9:41:35 PM UTC-5, Ryan Gedwill wrote:
>
> I live in the SF Bay Area and there are no shortage of jobs in Django. It 
> is true there are also plenty of jobs in Node, but you can’t compare a 
> framework to a backend language. I see far more python jobs than node jobs.
>
> 2 things to keep in mind though (for reference I’m a python/Django dev but 
> have experience in node and c# as well):
>
> 1. Just because something is very popular doesn’t mean it’s the easiest to 
> get a job in. There may be more python/JS jobs out there, but there are 
> also way more people applying to them. There are plenty of .NET jobs out 
> there, and far less entry level developers who are looking for them. Nearly 
> every single entry level developer is looking for those python/JS jobs
> 2. Often times the language and framework you’re experienced in doesn’t 
> matter. I recently had an interview for a Go position, and I was allowed to 
> pick which language I wanted to do the interview in. Most web development 
> jobs are looking for your understanding of general software and web 
> development principles. If you understand html/css/js, sql databases in 
> regards to MVC architecture, MVC architecture itself, and REST API’s and 
> requests, it probably won’t matter what language as long as you can prove 
> it. Knowing the language and framework of the company you’re applying to is 
> kind of just brownie points and improves your chances. If I’m amazing at 
> django and web development but don’t know the language being used, I’ll 
> generally be chosen over someone who’s shaky on web development who uses 
> the same language as the company
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Nov 14, 2018, at 6:18 PM, Arturo Fernandez <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
> Hello community, today someone at work told me to bare in mind which tech 
> I use in terms of profitability. As a backend language, there is no doubt 
> that I'll use Python, however I'm doubting about the framework, whether I 
> should use Python or not for web. 
> I heard that Django is kind of slow, and also there amount of jobs are 
> decreasing. Is that true? I initiated my web experience with Node.js, but I 
> don't want to continue it due to the instability. A friend recommend me 
> .Net, so I have all this kind of doubts in my head. Can someone help me 
> clear my mind? This is probably the best/not the best place to ask it but I 
> need some advice :/
>
> Thank you
>
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