Ranter
Join devRant
Do all the things like
++ or -- rants, post your own rants, comment on others' rants and build your customized dev avatar
Sign Up
Pipeless API
From the creators of devRant, Pipeless lets you power real-time personalized recommendations and activity feeds using a simple API
Learn More
Comments
-
@GXGOW Partially you're right, but at the same time not necessarily; when you start learning a language together with a framework it can be hard to differentiate between core language features and framework/library features, and how one builds on the other.
As dumb as it often sounds when someone talks about learning the fundamentals first, it's actually the better approach long term.
I had this issue with Java and IDEs once. When you never wrote (Java) code outside of an IDE you can be very dependent on it, as it handles all the imports, builds and classpath stuff for you and if you never did that by hand you're basically fucked if you're in a hurry.
Also it helps to appreciate how well-designed some package is and how it compares to other frameworks when you know how the long way around looks. -
This is exactly why I still list CSS, HTML, Javascript on my resume.
Even though I have SCSS and Angular already on there.
HR keyword scanning and resume bots are real. -
@deadlyRants this.
I feel grateful for having learned django/jinja templating language before learning angular. You get a much better sense of how Ajax/HTTP requests, and context objects work.
Related Rants
-
DirtEffect4Guy: *hands me sheet of paper* What does this code do? Me: *looks through code written on the paper* Well, mo...
-
Python8”Are you planning on having kids in the near future?” Literally (very) illegal to ask where I live. Too b...
-
NoMad11"Do you easily get offended?" "We have a bro culture here. [Some other stuff and examples] So do you think yo...
"So you have experience with Angular. And what about JavaScript?"
rant
wk256