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A promising direction (language, platform, cms for an absolute beginner to learn)?
Guys, tell me what to start studying for a person who is completely from scratch? The goal is to learn how to code acceptable in a year, and in two to have a stable remote job in this direction. There are no ambitions, no protests against the routine. There is a desire to provide for old age without the need to sell or go to the office.
Introductory - 43 years old, a woman, not stupid. Economic education and work experience. Adequate. Not talented. Zero in programming. In my youth, I had a couple of times the experience of creating real workstations based on relational databases. That's all. I liked the case, but the code was ugly. Well, I also did something in Excel, sql queries through a power builder, in access, etc., in short, every office hemorrhoids there when you need to automate. But again, that was a long time ago. In html, I just understand how things work, but that's all. CMS unpretentious yuzala, but without much success. CSS is a dark forest. I don't know how to write scripts, I'm not familiar with php.
The question is where, how and what to study so that in 5 years I will be in demand as a permanent remote worker, regardless of age and gender?
The banter is accepted, but combined with answers to the topic of the question.
Oh yes. With foreign languages - it's bad, so foreign resources are past the cash desk for now.
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It all depends on what area you want to work in. There are 2 directions - backend and frontend , which are more detailed here .
In terms of FE, you should start by learning HTML and CSS, and then move on to JavaScript.
And it is better to start studying the BE sphere with PHP, SQL and similar things.
The main difference between orders in these areas is that backend customers always know what they specifically need - they are able to explain their idea, while frontend customers only give hints.
Go to the frontend, here the person has already learned everything but could not find a job
It seems to me that your gender does not affect the possibility of finding a job.
As for me, there are two options for how to work - the shortest path to the bubble and the right path.
At one time I went the shortest way - I started learning php, it took me two weeks to take the first project through my friends (yes, for a beginner it can be a gold mine in the first month), fill your portfolio and you can go to larger projects. Specifically for training, English is paramount, then codecademy.com or Russian-language counterparts, thematic literature can be found here - vk.com/proglib. If you are interested in the backend - pay attention to php, namely one of the CMS - Wordpress or Magento, believe me, chew money there, especially in e-commerce, Magento will allow you to work with a rate of $ 30 per hour on Upwork in six months. com.
When you already have a stable income and an understanding of the situation, you will be able to think about how to develop further.
And most importantly - if you set a goal - strive and go towards it. php is an elementary language, everything is googled, in general google will be your best friend.
Again Upwork.com - monitor the market, take a closer look at the orders. Take a few cheap ones, $10-30 at a time, and then raise your bid. everything is in your hands, good luck.
UPD: theasder.github.io/learning/2015/01/25/let-us-lear... - might come in handy.
For the sake of fun, I will offer this option. Maybe it will work :)
Start learning C++
If it doesn't work - try Java/C# (throw a coin)
If it doesn't work - take Python or Ruby (it's better to try both)
If it doesn't work - PHP
If it doesn't work - try layout and JS
As I understand it, you have a web direction. Therefore, without a good knowledge of HTML and CSS, nowhere - this is the basis and you need to know it. This is for starters.
Of the CMS in Russia, 1c-Bitrix is very popular. From free WordPress and Joomla!
Study them at least at the level of an administrator, not a proger.
On freelancing, tasks periodically appear for the layout of all sorts of pages and business card sites, so start with this as you study the above.
I have no direction yet :). And thanks for the obvious (to everyone but me) distinction between front and back.
I want more in the backend, as it is more complicated and interesting. Plus stay away from idiots. Is it absolutely unrealistic? If you still try to break into the back, then what could be a training project that would impress the first employer? Would you even hire a woman? Is self-education possible in the field of backend?
If, nevertheless, the front-end, are there promising things in which so far few people fumble? It is clear that in any case, you will have to start with the basics and the banal layout of one-pagers. But in the future, I want to communicate with the leaders of serious projects, and not with customers of "beautiful sites"
To be honest, I think it's better for you to choose another area, i.e. not programming, but something related to people - perhaps teaching or a sales manager. Programming is a longing for those who do not like math, and if you do not like accounting, then math annoys you too. Most of the relevant sources for programmers are in English, the rest is irrelevant.
You can become a sales manager in some IT company, at the same time see how programmers work and be able to use the work experience that you already have.
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