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sergealmazov2013-12-04 11:16:02
JavaScript
sergealmazov, 2013-12-04 11:16:02

There are many technologies - how to find time for everything? Is it worth it to twitch, studying several in parallel?

I have a problem. I started with HTML. Then he rushed to Delphi, C. Then there was the university. At the university there was C / C ++, I liked C #. For 5 years I wrote in C# and worked in my specialty also in .Net. Now for a year and a half I have been developing in JavaScript. Those. eventually became a Front-End developer.
There is a great desire to get into Unity3D, maybe even learn the backend, but definitely not ASP.Net. I wanted to make my own game for a long time. But how long will it take? I'm not learning fast. Not a genius that catches everything on the fly.
Yes, and I understand that after the main job there is not much time.
And now I notice myself that I'm twitching. I'm 24. And as time goes by, is it time to develop more deeply in one technology? Or even study related ones?
PS Silverlight is no longer used, neither is Delphi, nor is MFC. OpenCL never came in handy for me, although the technology made me very happy, and it is specific.

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Alexey Kot, 2013-12-04
@sergealmazov

Greetings,
I am also 24 and still going through the same pain. The constant craving for new knowledge makes you try new technologies without reaching the level of a guru in the one you have already passed. Started with Delphi and HTML/PHP. Now I am actively learning iOS development (i.e. Objective-C) and I want to do game development for mobile platforms using Unity3D, while learning C # (which I started learning and abandoned back in 2004).
So, what am I talking about?
The correct answer to your question lies in the analogy with girls... you can love diversity, constantly choosing your girlfriends until you decide to get married in order to know this person for many years.
Curiosity is good, you need to be aware of modern technologies, not be afraid to try them, but it’s worth falling in love with one thing and digging deeper and deeper into it so that you have your own specific niche in which you become a specialist.
I understand that my answer simply mirrors your question, but for me this topic is open. And hardly anyone will give a 100% answer what you need to do. It should be borne in mind that there are two types of people - those who like to hone their skills in something to the limit, while others are simply generalists by nature and such specialists are also in demand.

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