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Baritonn2021-11-02 19:43:40
1C
Baritonn, 2021-11-02 19:43:40

Is it possible for a complete beginner to go to 1C programmers?

Is it possible for a complete beginner to go to 1C programmers from another field? Or is this niche already completely occupied?

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8 answer(s)
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Sgr_A, 2021-11-02
@Baritonn

I think the question itself is stupid in a sense. "Unrealistic, impossible" - this is what sits in the people themselves in their heads. If a person has a desire and aspiration, such questions never arise.
You need to understand exactly what you need. What do you want from this.

this niche is already completely occupied

From personal experience, I can say that the niche is experiencing an acute shortage of good specialists.
I'm bad at english

English is just one of the tools that opens up opportunities in a particular area. It can be improved. It's not clear, you didn't like the front-end and testing by themselves, or because you need to know English besides everything? Then you may not like 1C, since there is nothing to do here without knowledge of the subject area that needs to be serviced.
I wish you to find something that will truly be interesting and bring pleasure! Perhaps it will not be an information sphere at all :)

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Sergey Gornostaev, 2021-11-02
@sergey-gornostaev

Really. But it's not as hard to learn a language and a platform as it is to master an application area. In my opinion, it is much easier to improve English to the level of reading technical documentation than to understand accounting, for example.

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Alexander Karabanov, 2021-11-02
@karabanov

Don't make a mistake. Learn Go or Python or PHP or JS.

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Alexander, 2021-11-02
@Aleksandr-JS-Developer

The first language a programmer must learn is English.

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Dmitry Kinash, 2021-11-07
@Dementor

Or is this niche already completely occupied?

There is a shortage of staff in this niche.

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Alexander Prokhorovich, 2021-11-02
@alexgp13

In 1C, it is important not only and not even so much knowledge of the language, but knowledge of the subject area - accounting, warehouse, procurement or sales processes, payroll, etc. If it doesn't scare you, try it, there is work.
An important minus is the salary cap. If a cool Java developer can get 500k a month, then for 1C now the ceiling is around 270k and finding such a job, even with great experience, is not at all easy.

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Konstantin, 2021-11-03
@fosihas

1C as a starting language, quite. If it goes, you can switch or supplement it with another.
Many who do not encounter 1c have little idea of ​​its current and future capabilities. It's not worth counting out.
And OP, it's all relative...

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foonfyrick, 2021-12-17
@foonfyrick

As far as I know, in 1C it is easiest to develop to an average level and earn from 60k per month. You can work for a year, save money and sit at home to learn any other direction or language. But if you teach other programming languages, then there is such a monstrous competition that you won’t get through, now everyone goes to IT, in general, everyone, because salaries are high there, and everyone bypasses 1C because (this is not like a programming language, etc.) .d.). Jobs in 1C sea, they take without experience and teach everything for free. I advise you to go to 1C for a year, save up money and go further wherever you want, buy any courses, PC for work, much more opportunities open up through 1C.

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