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Andrey Sokolovsky2015-09-12 10:37:59
PHP
Andrey Sokolovsky, 2015-09-12 10:37:59

I plan my development. 3 years of commercial experience in JavaScript, html and PHP. Does it make sense to learn Java?

Hello.
For more than 2 years of independent commercial work, I have accumulated a decent amount of practical experience in JavaScript, jQuery, PHP, MySQLi, html, css, ajax, json api.
Studied pascal, delphi, assembler at the institute.
Now for the first time I get a job in the office as a front-end developer.
I started thinking about my career. I've been reading a lot in recent days.
I read about Java (for the first time. Or were all the programmers who wrote their articles exactly Java?)
I saw that I urgently need spoken English at the level of at least Intermediate.
And that it makes sense in the future to look for a company whose customers are Western or the company itself belongs to Western owners.
What do you think, in which direction of technology is it better to develop:
Learn node.js + angular.js + english?
maybe + php framework
or
learn Java ?
Interested in what future can await me if I go one way or the other?

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2 answer(s)
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IceJOKER, 2015-09-12
@IceJOKER

Oh fuck.....every time they ask the same type of questions a la "WHAT SHOULD I STUDY?"
What do you like? Do you have a desire to learn? Would you like to program on this or that and make money on it?
Answer these questions and everything, everything is just damn it!
You can earn money knowing only one HTML + CSS, the point is how much you know how to spin

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beduin01, 2015-09-12
@beduin01

No, Java doesn't make sense to learn. .NET is more promising.
If you don't like .NET, learn Python, Go, or D. The first two are in high demand on the market. If you need C++ with a human face and for the Web with BigData, then learn D.

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