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Studying programming for work or for university?
Brief information about my situation:
I work as a technical support specialist in an IT company, but in the future I want to work as a programmer in the same organization, for this I entered the university as a "programmer". At the university we study c #, but web programmers are required at work.
Well, actually the question is: is it worth learning c #, and then go to the web or score on c # (lab. I will either google the work or ask my classmates) and immediately study the web?
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Yes, it's worth it.
Learning one language will greatly facilitate the study of another, because it gives the concept of basic, language-independent constructions.
Well, actually the question is: is it worth learning c #, and then go to the web or score in c #
Most likely, you can safely score, unless someone from your future leadership advised a specific course.
Even in offline universities, instead of a programmer, the output turns out to be the devil that, at the interview of a graduate of a geofaculty, you can’t distinguish it from a programmer, both don’t know anything the same.
And from the game that they tell in online universities, the hair moves.
Everything is useful in business. The groundwork for the future will, in which case, go into C # development. If they teach, they must learn.
There is a third option. Be an anonymous and grow into a sysadmin, and then into a microservices admin (DevOPS) or DBA or whatever. Though mainframes.
Try it and see what happens and enjoy it. No one can live your life for you. Better to try and regret than not to try and regret.
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