Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Why is C# so little in demand among juniors?
I studied at the university in a technical specialty (not IT), despite this, we studied C #. From the third year I started working to pay for my studies (not IT), and also independently improved my knowledge of Sharp. I received my diploma last year. I have been looking for a job for the last six months.
Made one full-fledged project (desktop, warehouse accounting) for show. Worked with WPF, WinForms, .NET Core, SQL.
For six months in Moscow, I was invited to four interviews. For three, a refusal came within a few days, for the last one, the company procrastinated for a month (after the test), and then closed the recruitment altogether. At the same time, already three of my acquaintances from the university got a job in IT: two went to the web, one went to mobile phones.
And today I had doubts about the choice of language. Is it worth it to keep trying to find a job on Sharpe? Is it relevant among Juneau in Russia? In which direction is it better to look at the moment? What should be changed?
I was very tired this year - I work during the day, and in the evening I study the selected stack.
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
C# is comparable to Java. Both in complexity and scope. They don't take anyone.
Because the language is difficult.
But I'll tell you that even trainees with no sensible experience can immediately get a good salary.
In which direction is it better to look at the moment?
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question