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arslanalimbaev2020-05-11 09:17:14
Career in IT
arslanalimbaev, 2020-05-11 09:17:14

Ruby and Ruby on Rails for freelancing?

Does it make sense to learn Ruby and Ruby On Rails for freelancing in 2020? Or is it not so popular anymore and is it better to pay attention to other front-end languages?

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3 answer(s)
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Roman Mirilaczvili, 2020-05-11
@2ord

There are 2 articles, on the basis of which the author must independently come to a decision:
c3gdlk.ru/blog/rails/pochemu-stoit-uchit-ruby-on-r...
https://bureau.ru/soviet/20190704/
Ruby is not front-end language, but on the server side. Although there are small projects to translate it into Javascript on the client side.

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Puma Thailand, 2020-05-11
@opium

firstly, rails and ruby ​​is a backend
, secondly, you can take any language from the top 5 or even top 10, you alone won’t get less work on the market at all, it’s okay if you open a university and start training 10 thousand workers for ruby ​​a year, and then it would be necessary to think about where they should work, but in the context of one person, at least go to assembler

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Valentin V., 2020-05-18
@tin_vsl

Ruby on Rails is easy to learn and easy to use . It helps in various situations: both to quickly create a project and to easily understand someone else's code.
For fullstack development, RoR provides simple frontend libraries : Stimulus, Turbolinks and others, which allows you to replace jQuery and the like in favor of pure modern JavaScript.
With Ruby on Rails, you can solve tasks of various specifics with modern tools with high productivity, which is of great importance and makes sense for freelancing.

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