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Who can really learn in IT if you are a 25-year-old salesman and lawyer (please, no trolling)?
I ask you to help me navigate and not make mistakes. We have: 25 years, legal education, 3 years of work in sales. + - half a year ago I realized that I live not like that, and I need to change something. There was a confident desire to further develop towards the IT sphere. It's very hard to decide, I just don't know where to start. Computers, pieces of iron have always been interesting, in principle, with a computer more or less on you, BUT there is absolutely no programming experience. I don’t know what to start studying in order to enter it as quickly as possible (half a year or a year) at the trainee / junior level. I am considering the following professions: tester, coder, front-end dev
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I’ll say right away that the money factor is the last thing I’m interested in, I want to go to IT not because of high salaries, but at the call of my heart. Good money can be made in sales.
Tell me what to choose, and how to learn it?
Paid courses, self-study or university? I would be very grateful for practical advice, in fact, among my acquaintances there is not a single successful IT specialist, that's why I'm asking here.
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1) tester
Read the book "dot-com testing by Roman Savin", you will immediately understand your direction or not.
2) layout designer
- it is quite possible to become a good layout designer in a year, but with a high probability they will not be hired in the office, since now the layout is being taken out remotely or freelance. The prospects for just being a layout designer are just sad now.
3) front-end devs - there is not enough year here, look at the topics in the career tag on the toaster, lately there are often questions why they are not hired. So it is written by those who already have several years of experience. Keep in mind that now the economy is in recession and the window for starting is narrowing, a year will not be enough.
4) backend
as quickly as possible (half a year - a year) enter it
At the disposal of half a year - a year? Forget it.
There is no "easy entry" into IT, you have to work for YEARS, even considering that you have no friends.
And what is this constant "quickly roll in"? Always looking for the path of least resistance?
Find a partner and create something like a bot to which you send a screenshot of anything with a description, the bot forms a piece of paper to the court and sends it there for $ or how it works there.
I know for sure that I need to change something in my life, because I'm doing the wrong thing.
Balls, balls were always interesting, but I never held them in my hands, I saw them from afar.
Tell me where you can roll in six months or a year, so that they take an intern to the Olympic team.
I am considering options for football, basketball, rugby, ball gymnastics, tennis.
How to teach it? Of the acquaintances, all are skinny, no one went in for sports.
PS Sorry for the trolling, but seriously - in order to "lie down the soul", as you say, you should already have something. 25 years old is no longer a schoolboy, you need to solve such issues on your own. There are no easy ways. And NOBODY will say what exactly you will get in a year, because the background of all people is different.
Try it yourself - there are a lot of roadmaps. Spending an extra couple of months on some direction will not be a waste of time.
At the level of a junior trainee, no matter what you teach, it will come in handy in any case, whether you stay developing or switch to something else. Because at the beginning there are too many technologies you need to master in order to become at least a power user.
See what languages are suitable for what, choose one and start learning it, learn theory, solve problems, write code. If you can code at least 8 hours a day, then maybe there is a chance to get somewhere. And if this is just a fleeting decision, then in a month or two you will simply score and forget
Frontend React+Redux. Realistically within six months to master from scratch and find a job.
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