The biggest shock to me was the meeting thing. Some weeks in every job I've been in, 80% of my time will be sat in meetings. You need to be able to talk to people!
Thank you for this video! Very insightful! We also thought about that and made a new video about the difference between a software developer and a web developer as not all people know that and it brings more myths
@@sadhappy8860 usually i spend time to my customer. Going deep on what problem they have to provide the best solution. Then design the application in detail before touching code. This will speed up and save your coding time
I've been developing since I was around 13 years old on a Commodore 64. In my profession career I started out in C, Visual Basic 6 and Visual FoxPro 6. Since then I've used so many languages I can't count. From back end to front end... etc. The syntax may be different but it's all about LOGIC. When I worked at Steel Mill years ago I used Fortran on a VMS system. Now I lean toward C# for every type of application if I can because it can do anything. Been doing mainly C# and SQL since .NET 3.5. I did PHP for a while about 6 years ago.... I'll never use it again!! 😁
I'm a software developer by accident... I was lazy and would start automating my tech job and then got into testing and writing automations... then I got impatient for fixes so I would just do them...
I have a little experience in it, but I haven't used it in a while. F# was designed for a more specific use-case, and I don't focus in on that use-case, so I don't use it normally.
Yes and no. It was designed to be good at big data and other high-performance, tight-loop code needs. Yes, it can technically now be used for any .NET task, it isn't something that is a primary focus in .NET. Just like VB, F# is not the primary language of .NET. And really, why should Microsoft support 3 (and more, actually) languages that do the same thing in slightly different ways. True, F# is natively a functional language (although it can do OOP as well), but a lot of those lessons and areas of value are being pulled into C#. So, I haven't delved into F# because I don't need the things that it does best, and I don't need an alternate language to do the same general tasks that C# can do. Does that clarify what I mean?