Thanks Paul. I'm already thinking of some ideas from teaching, but nothing 
concrete yet! I have a few ideas that I will try and build to get into the 
swing of development.

I actually already know how to use React and have found using Turbo and 
Hotwire quite nice in Rails 7 ... that might be a controversial opinion 
though! Learning how to integrate React with Rails would definitely be 
useful and perhaps knowing when to reach for Turbo frames and when to use 
React would be even more useful, so that book looks like it would be a good 
read.

Thanks again!

Daz

On Saturday, April 20, 2024 at 9:35:37 AM UTC+1 Paul Bennett-Freeman wrote:

> > I'm currently working on building a portfolio, but is there anything I 
> should focus on in particular? 
>
> Since you've changed careers, is there anything you could build the plays 
> on that? Something you can spin a narrative around of "As a teacher, I 
> always wanted to do X, and so I built this tool that does it."
>
> Something like "Every term, I'd need to log on to the school web site and 
> copy a pupils grades one by one into a spreadsheet, so I built a web 
> scraper that does that automatically"
>
> When it comes to interviewing, being able to demonstrate you have 
> transferable skills and experience you can apply can give you the edge over 
> another junior developer who might be able to code as well as you, but has 
> nothing else to offer - that's a bit blunt, but recruiters are soulless 
> monsters mostly.
>
> From a more personal perspective, and definitely more controversial, so 
> take this as one person's option: Frontend in Rails (Turbo and Hotwire) is 
> a hot mess and very few companies actually use it. Learning some React, and 
> building against APIs you've written, or other people's APIs is a much more 
> transferable skill set. I'd recommend Noel Rappin's Modern Front-End 
> Development for Rails 
> <https://pragprog.com/titles/nrclient2/modern-front-end-development-for-rails-second-edition/>
>  which 
> covers all bases by including Turbo, Stimulus, React, and TypeScript. That 
> has a more balanced approach than a random person on the internet screaming 
> "Hotwire sucks!" ;) 
>
>
>
> On Thu, 18 Apr 2024 at 12:47, DAZ <daz...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Hi everyone,
> >
> > I've been a long time member of this group and been coding in Ruby since 
> Rails first came out, but it's only ever been a hobby for me.
> >
> > I've recently decided to have a career change from teaching to web 
> development and would like to get into Rails development, preferably in 
> Manchester or remote.
> >
> > I know a lot of you on here are already working as Rails devs - does 
> anybody have any tips about what the best things I should be doing? I'm 
> currently working on building a portfolio, but is there anything I should 
> focus on in particular? And any tips about the best way to find Rails 
> vacancies or opportunities?
> >
> > I'd also be interested to hear if anyone knows of any opportunities just 
> to get any unpaid Rails development experience.
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Daz
> >
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