this post was submitted on 24 Jun 2023
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No Stupid Questions (Developer Edition)
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In my personal opinion you should try to be a beginner or intermediate in all languages you think you'll need to work on. It makes you more valuable as a teammate and helps people view you as someone who can pitch in with anything. So if you think you'll need to use Java at your current job then I'd learn some!
You say you're familiar with Python, I say I'm intermediate with it, so like I only recently learned Python has multiple returns and tuples separately from each other. To me that's intermediate. Like, I can read python code and be pretty sure I understand what it does but I'll probably be a lot slower especially with niche features and frameworks.
If you do get into Java you'll want to look into Spring Boot. It is the de facto framework of Java the same way Rails is the de facto for Ruby.
This is good advice. Don’t be too much of a generalist to the point you know a lot of stuff badly, but also don’t corner into a technology and make it your identity.
Learn mainly the strengths and weaknesses of each language and tech you use, so you’ll know when you should pick something different for a specific project.