N
N
NeStudent2021-07-15 10:56:04
Career in IT
NeStudent, 2021-07-15 10:56:04

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

3 answer(s)
S
Sanes, 2021-07-15
@Sanes

C# is comparable to Java. Both in complexity and scope. They don't take anyone.

R
Ronald McDonald, 2021-07-15
@Zoominger

Because the language is difficult.
But I'll tell you that even trainees with no sensible experience can immediately get a good salary.

I
Ilya, 2021-07-15
@sarapinit

In which direction is it better to look at the moment?

Look towards the headhunter. Right now there are 47 vacancies in Moscow with the filter "beginning of a career, students".
Try everywhere, ask for feedback.
Find among your acquaintances a middle or a senior who drives you with questions on the stack.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question