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What is better to learn for full stack development in JS?
Hello! Previously studied HTML, CSS, Python, PHP, JS for my pet projects and not much freelancing experience. There was a permanent job not in the IT field, and everything suited me. There is a small web and programming base. Not very big, of course, without team development experience. As time passed, the web has changed, and freelancing orders are no longer as sweet and simple as they used to be. Unfortunately, now it turned out that I moved to the village and there is no work here. I want to start earning by programming on a remote job or, at worst, freelance. Requests are not big modest RFP and the position of a junior. I myself understand that you need to improve your skills, but in the case of JS, the zoo is so huge that you don’t know where to start. Pure JS doesn't like its magic. I'm the kind of person that I can figure out by trial and error but until I figure out what and how it constantly torments me. TypeScript seems to me to be better for learning in this case, but I could be wrong. On the other hand, everyone is asking for JS, just a boom in vacancies, etc. etc. I liked the Dart language for full stack, but it is not popular and the work is also, I guess, tight. What would you advise in this situation? Perhaps JS is not a panacea?
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full-stack guys is a myth, if you say that you are a full-stack, then you ran through the tops. I have been working on the backend for more than 10 years, sometimes I even have to prompt front-end developers, but I will never say that I am a full-stack. If I say that, they will laugh at me and fire me. Do not try to say when you enter a serious office that you are a full stack. Serious people will immediately refuse you if it's not Apple
Frameworks and libraries are needed everywhere now. But in order to use them and be a junior, at least you need to know the language itself perfectly. Even if you don’t like naked js, you still need to know it perfectly if you are looking for a frontend. Frameworks are always secondary when looking for a job. Questions will be on pure js.
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