That’s me in the intro! It’s been more than 1 year being a full time android Dev at one of the best org in India. I can relate to all the things that you mentioned, especially that part of lack of resources, there aren’t many tech RU-vidr/dedicated website for android. I’ve seen many popular RU-vidr moving away from android due to its irrelevancy over long term. I hope this gets better over time. Much needed content btw 🙌
'irrelevancy over long term' is quite a deep slang there. The OS can't really become irrelevant given that it is the most popular OS in the world. The development is more like; it will keep on changing. New things will keep on coming and we the developers will just have to adapt and try to stay at the latest. - In a way that is the fun of it. If things remain all the same, then we won't have anything to learn at the first place, right? :P (just kidding)
My issues with android development are crashes , Gradle exception , compile error , module error and I didn't find how to solve these in my applications
The hardness of android is actually beneficial when doing a job. Since we are more valued, more android devs are needed. Whereas, if you want to create your own app, then native's hardness is a real challenge.
I am pissed bro..😢😢.. i am currently Learning Android development.. The Resources are really really.. less compared to Web ..And when i get some good tutorials..they are of XML & JAVA .. not of Kotlin and Jetpack 😢😢
I really want to go with native android development but I'm stuck in finding good resources. I purchased a course on udemy but it only has Firebase for the backend part. What will be the roadmap for learning the backend for android app development ?
Started iOS, became very good at it. Now preparing for SDE interviews with DSA. Was it worth the effort? Are PBC(Product based companies) actually demanding iOS SDEs?