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Does it make sense to learn ruby in 2020?
Does it make sense to learn ruby, will I be able to find a job later, and what is the entry level?
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Is there any reason?
Will I be able to find a job later?
what is the entry level?
You need to learn what you like. Development is a creative process. If you do what you don’t like, then you won’t become a specialist, and as a result you won’t get a good salary. Ruby is rails. Look at the course on rails, try again. And the same with python django and php lavarel. What you like more is yours.
Besides, in the end, where to start doesn't really matter. In development since the 70s, nothing conceptually new has been invented. There is no difference on the example of which technology to teach the concept. The main thing is that you like it and have a desire to immerse yourself in it for 12 hours a day, to understand why specific tasks are solved this way and not that way.
With a high level of seniority, even with the OOP paradigm, move on to a functional matter for a couple of months. When an experienced developer uses a new tool, language, or library, it cannot be considered learning. You read the description of a library or tool, look at what problems are being solved in a new way, and you already know what will happen there. You just look at the conventions of the instrument and that's it.
There is another big plus of ruby. With knowledge of English on b1, Western vacancies open with RFP x2-3 from Russian ones. And ruby offices basically work directly with a western customer and direct communication. So for 7 years of communication, 1-2 hours a week, I pumped English from school a2 to b1. I did not learn any additional rules, I did not go to courses.
Once a week, they consistently send me vacancies in Ruby for an average salary of 200-200 thousand rubles per hand (Moscow, mostly remote work). Western projects - more. There is definitely a meaning. Specialists are needed. But it is specialists, not white people.
Unfortunately, my experience shows that people who ask what language they should learn are better off not going to IT, no offense. I'll explain why.
A person interested in languages usually comes to a decision himself and chooses a language that suits him and starts doing something in it without asking anyone. The question itself is understandable and in translation it reads "how to jump into IT so that they immediately paid 300k per second right from the threshold." The answer is that you need at least 10 years of experience, as well as thousands of sleepless nights. But those who are capable of such things do not ask such questions.
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