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Python or Java for immigration?
Hello. I'm a front-end developer, I've been working for a year, I decided to change my field of activity to the backend or enterprise path, to be honest, I like the backend more because enterpise seems to me like picking in the old code (please reassure me if I'm wrong). Of the languages, I settled on such as Java and Python. From the skills of only understanding OOP JS and writing simple user interfaces, well, jQuery libraries. Willing to spend time learning, within reason of course. Also in the future (one of the main prospects), after my experience in the language, emigration to England or America and I would like there to be no serious problems with finding a job, I mean problems like the lack of this very job rather than a lack of professional knowledge. Thank you very much for your reply!
PS I know how to use the search, I used it - I did not find the answer.
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In my opinion, Java is more suitable for moving today, since most of the vacancies in large European cities are in Java. Don't know about the US.
I would recommend that you spend a year or more learning Java if you have the time. Then write your pet project and try to get a Junior position. Then, having worked for a couple of years, you will be able to grow into a middle java developer, improve your English to B1 (and in your case, probably to B2, since the USA and Britain probably require a very high level of English) and send resumes to vacancies in the countries in question. It seems to me that this is a more or less realistic scenario.
For some reason, I got the impression that the comrade is a simple coder, and not a 'front-end developer'. This base is 'HTML/CSS/JS'. What about knowledge of 'CSS' frameworks? What about 'CSS' preprocessors? What about testing and building projects? Damn, Angular and React, does he know? Not? I thought so ... So what does he want to offer foreign comrades? If he works as a 'front-end developer' for a year (thank God, he's not a 'senior front-end developer'), and fails in all of the above, then how much time will he have to spend learning 'Java'? In general, my advice would be to become an expert in your field first, and then expand to 'full-stack'. Let him try to take an order for 'upwork', complete it, then another and another, register an individual entrepreneur, and then it's worth thinking about immigration (yes, why does everyone think that they are waiting there with open arms?). Over the hill, as everyone knows, the grass is greener and beer is not diluted ...
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