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foonfyrick2020-12-10 10:21:42
Android
foonfyrick, 2020-12-10 10:21:42

Android developer, how to write a resume for finding the first job and can I count on the salary?

In general, I would continue to study at home, but this is not effective, because after work my head is clogged with completely unnecessary things, and the learned material is forgotten a little.

I'm not sure if this can be called the material covered, since it was only superficially covered, but still I will list:
1) Medium-confident possession of android studio (I don’t know all the functionality, I’ll describe more simply what I have NOT tried:
ChipGroup, Chip, ChekBox, RadioButton,RadioGroup,ToggleButton,WebView,VideoView,CalendarView,RatingBar,SearchView,
TextureView,SurfaceView, Hor/Ver Divider, Guideline,TableRow, ViewPager,NestedScrollView,TabLayout,TabItem,ViewStub,AdView,MapView,TabHost animations.
)
1.1) Knowledge of life cycles of activities and fragments.
2) I write confidently in Kotlin and have a superficial understanding of Java, I didn’t understand how everything works under the hood, at the beginning of the training I watched Java lessons, but wrote in Kotlin, there were no problems in understanding what to write where. I can explain how they work and what features they have: functions, classes, variables, interfaces, lambda expressions, extension functions, generics, coroutines, collections, arrays, operators and keywords.
3) I had experience using patterns: MVC, MVVM, Single-Activity, Singleton, Observer. (I had experience, which means I wrote a couple of small applications with MVC, a couple with MVVM, etc.)
4) Following the principles of SOLID.
5) When testing the code, I use Espresso and JUnit, a superficial knowledge of the basics of testing.
6) There was an experience of using libraries: JSoup, Retrofit, Room, Gson, Picasso )
7) I’m not good at building a folder hierarchy: here’s an example for you)
5fd1cb61aaf85701085200.png

Well, something like this, I won’t say that I conducted the training effectively, because there were moments when I crammed something, not understanding how it works, or, being afraid to forget the material already passed, began to repeat everything again as from a clean slate.
Now, based on this information, I would like to see an example of a resume for finding a job, as well as hear from you recommendations on a further training plan, if, nevertheless, I still can’t find a job =)

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2 answer(s)
J
Jacen11, 2020-12-10
@Jacen11

in general, how to write a proper resume is not just one article. There are plenty of examples on hh.ru, for example.
From the information that you gave, it is not clear how to write a resume, there is no key information.
Topics with which you are familiar are usually simply listed in the key skills.
If you live in Moscow, you will definitely find a job, quickly and now. If not, then with experience it’s more likely not)
According to self-study, everything seems to be fine, something like that is necessary. Well, the only thing that needs to be memorized is the theory of social security. Of course, you think that you know the topics you wrote about, but in reality you don’t know a damn thing about them.

S
Sergey Vodakov, 2020-12-10
@WaterSmith

1) Medium-confident possession of android studio( I don’t know all the functionality, I’ll describe more simply what I have NOT tried:
ChipGroup,Chip,ChekBox,RadioButton,RadioGroup,ToggleButton,WebView,VideoView,CalendarView,RatingBar,SearchView,
TextureView,SurfaceView, Hor/ Ver Divider, Guideline,TableRow, ViewPager,NestedScrollView,TabLayout,TabItem,ViewStub,AdView,MapView,TabHost, I also don't understand animations.
)

That's all that you have listed, it's not "android studio", it's Android SDK
Do not confuse, because if you say so at the interview, IMHO it will be a serious minus to the impression of you.

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