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Junior C#/MVC developer looking for answers to his questions?
A little background:
I graduated from the university with a degree partially related to programming. I have been working for several years to this day in the technical support of one financial organization. A little more than six months ago, I tried my hand at programming, I liked it, I finished courses in C # / ASP.NET (3 months), now I am self-studying and I have a great desire to change my job to an interesting one. There are not so many vacancies for this "junika" at the moment, and almost everyone wants experience or satisfactory answers in interviews and so on.
I have knowledge (in my opinion)
1) medium C #, ASP.NET MVC (I chose it because I liked it much more than the classic one)
2) a little HTML. CSS, SQL, EF
In general, I'm interested in answers to the following questions (or in which direction to move)
1) is it worth spending all your free time studying mainly in C # or is it possible that, based on the market, it is additionally necessary knowledge of at least a small amount of js, jquery, wpf, tdd, etc.
2) is it possible to somehow get some experience on this stage? can anyone tell me..or what to train on?
3) maybe my resume is "not very" if there are those who want to see and advise in this regard (preferably of course for those who conduct technical interviews personally)
4) or maybe there are kind people who sometimes help with a word / thought or something else =)
thanks for Attention.
PS I ask because there is no one to ask, there are no familiar programmers in the right direction
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I don't understand why there are so many questions like this? Are you really not able to draw some conclusions yourself, look for such questions (they appear almost every day) ... Is it really not clear that in order to find out something you need to do something ...
Come up with a small project for yourself and do it. He started to finish. And the experience will be, and show what will be, and you will understand for yourself what knowledge you especially lack. And do more on your own. Even if something doesn’t work out beautifully for you, then just show someone your creation (at the same interview) so that at least they point out the mistakes to you.
You have to be bolder, otherwise you will stagnate in place.
I didn’t say that I don’t do anything, I study on my own as I wrote above, work through questions that I didn’t answer at the interviews and close other dark places ..
what I lack is partially clear, I can’t break into everything at once ... and therefore I ask what is better to know 1-2 well or a bunch but not very ...
You don't know how to ask questions. Here are the points for you:
Learn anything, but better than what you like. If the technology is used (in general in the world), then somewhere there are those who need specialists in it. C# is now one of the mainstream development languages for windows. C# programmers are needed now (and you could have made this conclusion without me).
You have to do something to gain experience. Train on catshome projects. Subject Lebedev advises young designers to open a refrigerator and make an advertisement\package\promosite for any product. Make any app/website/whatever you want. That will be the experience. Write a blog, a guest book, an application for WinPhone, under win8, under just a desktop. Anything. Generally.
There are a hundred thousand million articles on the Internet on how to write a resume. If you are not able to read them and write a more or less normal resume, then I'm afraid that's not the point. And yes, the resume "plays" only at the stage when your response \ profile on hh, see the girl from HR. Then a technical specialist communicates with you, who in 95% of cases does not care about your resume. This is my subjective opinion.
I will help with pleasure. Write questions and wishes. Or do you just throw worldly wisdom?
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