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artem2022-01-03 12:36:10
IT education
artem, 2022-01-03 12:36:10

Should I learn native android development or should I switch to cross-platform?

The question arose, I have been studying native android development for a year intermittently, I thought to improve my knowledge and find a job, but with recent trends to record videos on YouTube, like "What will be relevant in 2022?" I learned that supposedly mobile development will soon disappear and only cross-platform will remain.

Questions:
What is the best way to enter IT?
What are the prospects for both areas?
What is more relevant at the moment?
Where is it easier?
What would you do if you were in my position?

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3 answer(s)
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Alexander Prokhorovich, 2022-01-03
@arteqrt

The point of entry into the profession is now quite high, even with good experience it is sometimes difficult to find a job, not to mention the very beginning of work. So getting into IT is now equally difficult with any technology. Even the riveting of one-page landings is already so crowded that it is almost impossible for a beginner to break through.
And do not look at YouTube, there you can find confirmation of any point of view. Both native and cross-platform development are alive and have their own niches. It is also important to understand that a business (namely, it pays money) in general does not care what the application was made for, the customer just needs a beautiful working application that will bring money.
ps subjectively, the cross-platform forgives more errors, since there are lower requirements for code quality and speed, this is from the series if only it worked. If you need speed and optimal battery consumption, then native development is still not losing ground.

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Adamos, 2022-01-03
@Adamos

People who understand mobile development earn mobile development, and not writing garbage on YouTube.
Android has been around for many years, and there is still native development for it, and there are cross-platform solutions. Because both are really needed, just in different niches. If you need to communicate with a fitness bracelet, you need to get into the system up to your elbows, and cross-platform solutions will only interfere. And if you need to quickly add a client to your shitty site, a monster in javascript is enough, which will also work for mobile phones.
Mobile development is a direction, not a niche. There are all sorts of different things in it, and there are no "more correct answers" to such idiotic questions and cannot be.
Well, it is not necessary to look for "where it is easier" or, moreover, "where it is more promising."
You need to look for where you yourself can do something and catch on in order to “vaytivate”.
Because no matter how well you learn anything, Google will not immediately send you an offer.

J
Jacen11, 2022-01-03
@Jacen11

I could have found a job in a year and figured everything out myself. Instead of watching strange vids, I could have seen what is popular now
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and with all this in reality, without much difference what to actually choose. A normal developer will quickly be able to change one to another. Rather than rushing back and forth, I would have become a pro in one direction a long time ago and would have received tons of dough. Even a delphist or 1c can get a hell of a lot and find a job without any problems. If a good specialist of course.

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