The Importance of Specialization in Coding

Ғылым және технология

Many people want to learn everything, which is impossible. Pick a tech stack and learn as much as you can about that group of technologies. It will make you more valuable than being a jack of all trades.
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Пікірлер: 582

  • @fifthavenue2105
    @fifthavenue210521 күн бұрын

    According to LinkedIn job postings, I have to be an expert on literally everything

  • @fiskryeziu

    @fiskryeziu

    21 күн бұрын

    facts

  • @ianfrye8988

    @ianfrye8988

    21 күн бұрын

    I work in recruiting and heard something interesting one time - Consider things on a job postings as of "Has knowledge of it" as you know what it is and could learn it if needed. Most things are not required and a lot of these are being written by AI these days.

  • @ehm-wg8pd

    @ehm-wg8pd

    21 күн бұрын

    thats why their job listing never filled

  • @lostinthenarrativve

    @lostinthenarrativve

    21 күн бұрын

    Who cares about linkedin, build your business and hire yourself .

  • @50PullUps

    @50PullUps

    21 күн бұрын

    Sometimes those job postings aren’t sincere attempts at finding candidates. I had an interview (with a major payment card company in the northern suburbs of Chicago) for a ‘Network Technician’ job several months back where they preferred knowledge of Python, Ansible, AWS… but then daily duties involved tracking inventory of network equipment. That struck me as odd, but I accepted the interview. Didn’t get the job. Later I realized that the absurdity of the posting was no accident. The hiring manager (or whoever came up with that job description) was likely creating the conditions where they were able to present the appearance of productivity, rather than do anything that was actually productive.

  • @dtwelve89
    @dtwelve8921 күн бұрын

    Brad is so humble, he actually knows a lot about a lot.

  • @shadowslayer2248

    @shadowslayer2248

    21 күн бұрын

    When you have been coding for sometime you start getting clarity that there are way better people than you at anything and all you can do is learn and improve. This leads to humility

  • @douglascounts4634

    @douglascounts4634

    21 күн бұрын

    When you have been doing this as long as he has, you will understand that languages are more the same than they are different. They all have strings, arrays, Booleans, and looping for example. What can be very different are things like specific drawing libraries and things like that for each language. Also everything has to generate the same CSS, HTML, and JavaScript as end products.

  • @AustinDoesDesign

    @AustinDoesDesign

    21 күн бұрын

    bruh got jacked af

  • @Loki_Dokie

    @Loki_Dokie

    16 күн бұрын

    ​@@AustinDoesDesignI noticed his face is slimmed down, glad for him improving himself in many ways, he deserves it.

  • @fszotyi
    @fszotyi21 күн бұрын

    I have started with your Laravel crash course back in 2017. Learned a lot from you, then started my own learning projects in laravel, but kept my job. Finally I got a developer position in 2022, learned vue and here I am. Now i am a developer thanks to your work also, you helped me, to make all this possible, through your tutorials. Thank you Brad. You are awesome! 🙇

  • @ForexPeak

    @ForexPeak

    21 күн бұрын

    Hey @fszotyi I'm on the same journey as well. Why don't we connect? 😄

  • @fszotyi

    @fszotyi

    21 күн бұрын

    ​@@ForexPeak👍

  • @TraversyMedia

    @TraversyMedia

    21 күн бұрын

    That’s awesome ❤

  • @jj-big-slay-yo

    @jj-big-slay-yo

    19 күн бұрын

    Neat.

  • @Loki_Dokie

    @Loki_Dokie

    16 күн бұрын

    Wish I never gave up on it, 10 months given to learning, learned a ton but burned myself out (ft job, kids, and learning 5 hours after work) Considering getting back on JS, which was my pain points, but am going to learn GDscript to dev an indie game also 😀 If I / had i used TypeScript it probably would've helped, I like strict

  • @DennisIvy
    @DennisIvy21 күн бұрын

    Dude your looking younger and better looking than ever! Sharp man, proud of you. Good info as well 💪

  • @daliborpetric8288
    @daliborpetric828818 күн бұрын

    TRaversy media tutorials gave me chance to get a job 6 years ago with that knowlege. Im now senior developer, and i can't enough say THANK YOU BRAD!

  • @theelastog1580

    @theelastog1580

    14 күн бұрын

    Which few videos would your recommend of his ?

  • @appcolab

    @appcolab

    9 күн бұрын

    ​@@theelastog1580almost all his videos are helpful, so grab what you want to learn

  • @comoyun

    @comoyun

    8 күн бұрын

    @@theelastog1580 yeah, I'm interested too.

  • @aviationmachines4711

    @aviationmachines4711

    Күн бұрын

    50 projects in 50 days in javascript, 20 web projects with vanilla js, expanse tracker, image gallery, react front to back. . . and lot. . my career also starts 7 years ago. watching and practicing his videos, dev ed, web dev simplified. . now I am earning 2 lakhs per month in India. he transformed my life.

  • @Suresh-iu2tx
    @Suresh-iu2tx21 күн бұрын

    Avg fresher job posting - 5 years experience in full stack, cloud, ai, ml, devops, deep learning, computer vision, nlp

  • @dystopian_1

    @dystopian_1

    20 күн бұрын

    and a good 'team player' :P

  • @AdolfRizzler41

    @AdolfRizzler41

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@dystopian_1and good soft skills

  • @johnmcnamara8741

    @johnmcnamara8741

    18 күн бұрын

    @@dystopian_1don’t forget pay: 16$ an hour

  • @fahimsautomation1288
    @fahimsautomation128821 күн бұрын

    I thought I could be a jack of all trades, learning Python, DS, ML, Web development, and PHP for WordPress. But your video came at the right time and made me realize What I want to do with that tech? Is it for getting a job? Or Building the next Unicorn. It is not about how many tools and tech I know. Instead, it is about learning specific stacks, deep diving, and exploring the abundance of library and building projects. I also realize that small or big projects strengthen my logical ability. That's How I can be specialized.

  • @TraversyMedia

    @TraversyMedia

    21 күн бұрын

    I think once you find a stack to really “master” (if that’s even a thing), then it’s fine to keep learning more. I just think it’s important to have a focus for the first couple years

  • @youtubeplaylist5018

    @youtubeplaylist5018

    19 күн бұрын

    So exactly what you choose to do at the end ?

  • @ianfrye8988
    @ianfrye898821 күн бұрын

    I think more important than anything is focusing on the fundamentals such as Objects, Classes, Variables, Arrays - how to manipulate data, fetch data, async and concurrent programming - It was so much easier for me to pick up a new technology once I learned the fundamentals. I learned Typescript and Java and was able to write a program in flutter after watching one tutorial and picking up the docs. That's another things, get really good at reading docs.

  • @SirProdigle

    @SirProdigle

    21 күн бұрын

    Yeah, specialising so aggressively is bad advice for anyone not a beginner/in their first job tbh. If you have solid foundations and can float between similar technologies, companies will happily hire you to work with languages/tech you've never used before. If you specialise so heavily, your job market will shrink a lot as the years ago by

  • @centro-ao

    @centro-ao

    21 күн бұрын

    Yep, lots of folks don't enjoy reading docs, so they stick to KZread for help.

  • @jbm2074

    @jbm2074

    20 күн бұрын

    @@centro-aothat is what being said here. You can't enjoy reading docs if you don't understand what's going on. Especially for libraries and frameworks , you should build the intuition to understand the docs not always going to youtube, by understanding programming concepts. Please I am not saying youtube is bad . If you are stuck go and look for help but reading docs it's an underated skill. It can make your programming life easier in this industry were new technologies are always available.

  • @SirusStarTV

    @SirusStarTV

    18 күн бұрын

    All these languages and libraries/frameworks abstract everything to a point where everything doesn't make sense and makes it challenging to form a coherent mental model. If some error would occur you wouldn't be able to deal with it and fix the problem. Some libraries docs really explain the inner parts of their code and explain why they use their approach to code.

  • @harshwagh4280

    @harshwagh4280

    13 күн бұрын

    +1

  • @zxyi9090
    @zxyi909021 күн бұрын

    I am in my 40s and now I am deep diving into Javascript because it is the language of the web. Thanks Brad for all your worthy efforts. 😊

  • @Shaydon845

    @Shaydon845

    18 күн бұрын

    Am 18 I've your comment inspires me .

  • @harshitrautela6585

    @harshitrautela6585

    16 күн бұрын

    Brother, your dedication inspires me

  • @user-zh3ow4nh3p

    @user-zh3ow4nh3p

    15 күн бұрын

    Here I am with plans to move away from JavaScript after 10yrs with it😅. It's so frustrating keeping up

  • @sys935

    @sys935

    12 күн бұрын

    Javascript nowadays can be used for web and desktop app can be used even offline on local computer storage

  • @Mahakaal1221

    @Mahakaal1221

    12 күн бұрын

    I am learning at 25 😂

  • @DannyMexen9
    @DannyMexen921 күн бұрын

    My career made me a generalist (I was required to know a little bit of everything) and so I became a manager. Management became my specialty. I can have a meaningful conversation with anyone on the technical team. It makes them feel like I know everything but I don’t nor do I pretend to. I simply do my best to enable theirs.

  • @Apenschi
    @Apenschi21 күн бұрын

    Soo true! The frameworks keep developing and it is hard to even stay up-to-date with one or two of them. Also whenever you learn new thing you "overwrite" older knowledge to some degree.

  • @lalithprasadsrigiriraju
    @lalithprasadsrigiriraju19 күн бұрын

    The first honest KZread tech content creator?

  • @poznianski
    @poznianski21 күн бұрын

    Very important topic, especially for beginners who might feel overwhelmed. Good that you're pointing it out.

  • @chivicks_hazard
    @chivicks_hazard21 күн бұрын

    Thank you for the reminder Brad. It's not easy to stick to things as an entry-level developer with all the hype around various technologies but at if one is able to create a roadmap for himself/herself, it will be easier to scale through. Thank you once more for always giving us meaningful content.

  • @user-ll4wy3ur3e
    @user-ll4wy3ur3e18 күн бұрын

    I haven't watched a video from this channel in a long time but 2018 was when I learned how to code and then eventually get two jobs since. It took some time but I got there in the end. Thanks man.

  • @eczeeofficial
    @eczeeofficial21 күн бұрын

    I've been following you for years now and man you bacame JACKED!!! I'm really happy for you Brad! Hope you're doing well now and thanks for all the effort and amzing content you've put out for us strugglers! Love from Italy

  • @nunorodrigues5628
    @nunorodrigues562816 күн бұрын

    I work at a small company. We needed to use a different framework for a new product we were developing. The last one used angular 1. So we played around with your crash courses, and that helped us make a decision pretty quick. Your channel is really useful to understand the basics of web technologies really quickly.

  • @CyberTechBits
    @CyberTechBits21 күн бұрын

    Yo Brad! I started learning on your channel and now I'm getting ready to launch my own SaaS. I haven't watched your channel in quite some time but I never unsubscribed and I started just as you suggested many years ago...learning the basics...and for me that was vanilla HTML, JS and CSS. I've been swamped building my service. You're the best brother! Now I need to find a co-founder!

  • @mmelimahlobo7656
    @mmelimahlobo765618 күн бұрын

    Thanks Brad been switching from PHP to Javascript and have not been good anything but decided to stick with PHP and I am doing great❤

  • @AgCodes143
    @AgCodes14320 күн бұрын

    Absolutely true. The approach I use for this whole learning thing is understanding the difference between mission and methods. The mission of coding is data and information sharing or manipulation, the methods includes all the different language used to achieve that mission. No point learning different languages that literally solve the same problem. Identify the foundation of coding, then limit your learning of methods to your goal, because methods will always change, but the mission will always remain.

  • @muindemwangangi9150
    @muindemwangangi915020 сағат бұрын

    Thank you from Kenya, Brad. You helped me start my career in coding. I learned Laravel from your channel and am now a front-end developer using Angular. My transition was smooth since I had covered most of your programming basics.

  • @shindeshubhamm
    @shindeshubhamm19 күн бұрын

    My journey in development started because of this man during Covid pandemic. He's just fantastic teacher. I have reached this far because of him. Awesome man! Hats off! Great work!

  • @Jeancyjr
    @Jeancyjr21 күн бұрын

    By far the best channel for me. I've learned a lot. I like his teaching style and approach.

  • @leandrofahur_
    @leandrofahur_21 күн бұрын

    You're the best! I started learning with you, and I keep learning with you. Thx for being awesome and very objective!

  • @carchutogimenez8539
    @carchutogimenez853916 күн бұрын

    Thank you for your honesty. You didn't have to put this online, as it goes against your best interest, so, once again, I thank you for your honesty. Not only you are a great teacher, but you also have integrity, you should be proud of yourself.

  • @ind_gagan1
    @ind_gagan14 күн бұрын

    Great video, you summed up your coding experience pointers in few minutes. Very helpful ! Thanks man

  • @kettenbach
    @kettenbach21 күн бұрын

    Looking jacked 💪 bruh! I need to up my gym game. Great to see you Brad!

  • @techienomadiso8970
    @techienomadiso897018 күн бұрын

    Brad, saw you 4 years ago when I was in campus. You inspired me a lot to keep coding. Now my life is set career wise and I’m glad to see that you also went to the gym and did the necessary! To more life and success 🥂🍻 cheers!

  • @mecamon
    @mecamon14 күн бұрын

    Thanks for this kindly reminder, Brad. We all appreciate it and appreciate you.

  • @iramudoy2317
    @iramudoy231716 күн бұрын

    Very précised and relative to the freshers. Couldnt resist sharing this. Good job man!!

  • @dystopian_1
    @dystopian_121 күн бұрын

    Your words make be believe in humanity. Thanks for being kind and humble, Brad.

  • @KristianTheDesigner
    @KristianTheDesigner9 күн бұрын

    This is really great advice. I think whenever i ”learn” something new it is more out of curiosity rather than wanting to become supergood in it. I find it inspiring to dip my toes in the shallowend of different pools..just to be able to talk about and have a basic understanding of product/language X , in addition to the tech i am actually using and working with everyday. Also..the reason i am using what i am using now is because i did the exact same thing with that, so maybe i suddenly find a new expertise by accident. At the end of the day, it should be fun.

  • @yahayaoyinkansola8258
    @yahayaoyinkansola825812 күн бұрын

    Thank you brad for this video, it has helped me clarify some things about specialization

  • @arberstudio
    @arberstudio9 күн бұрын

    Your 20 JS projects reawakened a spark for coding, and went from a thing I once used to do to creating my very own JS frontend framework. It’s no ReactJS but it works! Thank you man!

  • @alinemendonca2488
    @alinemendonca248815 күн бұрын

    You are amazing, i was always afraid to learn laravel, because i saw many people saying "php will die", but your video was so didactic and so clear that i decided to learn more about this framework and php, thank you for having such a rich and clear content!

  • @TheYinyangman
    @TheYinyangman21 күн бұрын

    Looking good Brad - good for you man getting into shape.

  • @neo90sr
    @neo90sr21 күн бұрын

    Nice video Brad, really look up to you. You've helped me in becoming a developer and land my first job 😊

  • @hassanadedoyin8062
    @hassanadedoyin806213 күн бұрын

    Just always honest and very straightforward as I see him

  • @iamakinjuwon
    @iamakinjuwon17 күн бұрын

    If there is someone I respect in this space brad is definitely one of them from is tutorials and detailed explanation,make you understand it very well,I learned most of my frontend skills from him....thanks for this

  • @piotrdev
    @piotrdev19 күн бұрын

    Brad is the legend! Thanks for all the content you provide, this is always outstanding!

  • @bharat_thapa_
    @bharat_thapa_13 күн бұрын

    Great advice. Don't chase 'The best XYZ' just start working on something you believe is useful / helpful to make money (like: js, python, php, react, blah blah blah). All the best.

  • @ultrasys
    @ultrasys21 күн бұрын

    Edifying video. You probably don’t know (because it really doesn’t make any difference in the grand scheme of things) but I watch your videos just for the fun of them, even though I’m not interested in most of the subjects you present (the specific technologies, I mean), but I lear A LOT from your presentations. In the recent past (for me, at least, since 10 years is nothing from my perspective) I watched closely your health bump, if you know what I mean, and was glad to see everything worked out okay, so, yeah, you’ve got real people that are more concerned with you, than with your videos. I’m sure the great majority of your audience shares my feelings that you’re a real nice guy IRL and thet you’re not into this just for the likes and monetizing. One thing I can clearly observe, though, is that you’re so focused even being into an apparent unfocused world, that you don’t devote much attention to fixing your environs (the computer one, I mean - we can see that your room is very well equipped and comfortable). I often find myself asking if you don’t change your fonts because you don’t bother, of because you actually like them as they are hahahaha You’re one of those YT heavy lifters, Brad. Thanks for that.

  • @mensahtribeadventures2630
    @mensahtribeadventures263018 күн бұрын

    I enjoy java and springboot learned frontend from you. Thank you so much. Really want to get more into angular 17

  • @jonathanhammond5563
    @jonathanhammond556316 күн бұрын

    Traversy looking to be in great shape man! Since you took that break I’m happy for you.

  • @yj4105
    @yj410521 күн бұрын

    hi Brad, I am really grateful on uploading those kind of mentoring vids. As a self-taught developer, I needed to hear something like this from a someone professonal and this helps a lot. it will be great if you can create another video tips on portfolios how and what we should create before we dive into the job market.

  • @cipherlofi6453
    @cipherlofi64535 күн бұрын

    very good to see you like this, You are in a great shape!

  • @hadibq
    @hadibq20 сағат бұрын

    that's so true Brad! Thanks for explaining this and for all the knowledge shared so far!!

  • @pickeld5616
    @pickeld561611 күн бұрын

    Hii brad, you help me a lot in my career journey. just want to say thank you so much.

  • @travelsumatra2393
    @travelsumatra239320 күн бұрын

    This is so true, even for content creator like you need a specialization. Not everyone know everything except Derek 😊

  • @33t00p
    @33t00p5 күн бұрын

    This is such a valuable point that is rarely mentioned. Thanks for that.

  • @jonathanjohnson2785
    @jonathanjohnson278521 күн бұрын

    Thanks Brad. Still learning so much from you

  • @timungasangho
    @timungasangho21 күн бұрын

    This man clear up my mind now.. I have been wondering learning different languages stuff which I chose would be the best me. Now other than Java and Python I should focus on javascript as my priority. Thanks Brad.❤

  • @loganbelew4832
    @loganbelew483219 күн бұрын

    Thanks man, your channel is a big help for us devs.

  • @sparda111222
    @sparda11122213 күн бұрын

    You are one of the most sincere content creator out there. Thank you.

  • @msydneyau
    @msydneyau21 күн бұрын

    Looking good, mate! Haven’t seen you for a couple of years and you look younger 🎉 Your Laravel tutorial (the first one) was the best (one for me)!

  • @imadabab
    @imadabab21 күн бұрын

    Thanks a lot Brad for this brilliant video. I agree 100% with you.

  • @sunwarulislam7402
    @sunwarulislam740218 күн бұрын

    Great advise. you helped many of us build our career in web development. Thanks man!

  • @jamilabbasOfficial
    @jamilabbasOfficial18 күн бұрын

    4 years ago I learned MERN stack from your videos/ thank you so much for creating so valuable content.

  • @khemchay
    @khemchay16 күн бұрын

    Code is my lifeblood. Even as a student wasy back 2008, I was hooked, building my own homelab from scratch. Back then, it was portable servers(slackOS and even make my own distro + apache or nginx), DLLs, and programming libraries on a USB drive and CD's - a far cry from today's package managers and Docker. I've rebuilt that lab countless times depends on a project, and to this day, I'm still shoulder-deep in code at any languages, scaling massive datasets for AI projects. The truth is, there's no one-size-fits-all approach. Generalists and specialists both bring value, and finding your own sweet spot is key.

  • @skinnytimmy1
    @skinnytimmy113 күн бұрын

    Learn one way to do each thing. Like the react example, the first time you learn a framework, you're also learning frameworks as a whole. It will be much easier to understand other ways to do the same thing later.

  • @nammi895
    @nammi8956 күн бұрын

    Your channel is an emotion, dude thanks a lot for your contribution 7 yrs ago I started my coding journey watching your channel for Python & JS, now I'm working at FAANG making top $$ Coming from a poor family your channel helped me a lot to learn things from free, and after getting money I was able to support my brother education & clear off my parents debts Thanks 🙏🙏

  • @antonio_carvalho
    @antonio_carvalho18 күн бұрын

    I've been watching your videos for over a decade now. Your evolution in all areas is incredible, all while keeping your qualities of a hard working, humble and honest content creator and presenter, creating great content that is filled with knowledge. Really happy to see you in such great shape! You are very relatable and an inspiration to a lot of people, I hope you know and feel proud of that! Now the only thing left to improve is to get rid of those hats! 😂 jk! Thank you for your excellent content!

  • @maxrush206
    @maxrush20621 күн бұрын

    Dang Brad! I've been watching your channel for years, but I haven't watched a video in a while. You're looking in great shape buddy💪💪

  • @dakoderii4221

    @dakoderii4221

    21 күн бұрын

    If not for his voice and mannerisms I would think it's his brother or cousin but not Brad.

  • @aricwilliamsdeveloper

    @aricwilliamsdeveloper

    19 күн бұрын

    Imagine if all devs was on flex mode lol.. im getting in shape also, great to see Brad on it!

  • @elyasdemeke23
    @elyasdemeke2319 күн бұрын

    Liked the video before even seeing it. The GOAT is giving us wisdom on top of free crash course. I have made a living with Vue and Nuxt after watching your crash course.

  • @craig-scott
    @craig-scott16 күн бұрын

    Thanks a lot, Brad. You're looking well. All the best.

  • @srsh12345
    @srsh1234518 күн бұрын

    Thank you for the great breakdowns.

  • @techwithdayan20
    @techwithdayan2021 күн бұрын

    Thanks so much Mr Brad, I appreciate your good work always

  • @AsToNlele
    @AsToNlele9 күн бұрын

    Hi Brad, haven't watched in quite a while. You look super good! Saw you even under some Sam Sulek videos 💪😄. Thanks to your React courses and videos I was able to land a part time job while studying, which I'll be always grateful for. I think you're an amazing teacher and especially these "no coding" videos make a big impact on people's careers.

  • @diabeticnomad
    @diabeticnomad21 күн бұрын

    Amen brother couldn't have said it better! wish everyone was given this advice in college like I was

  • @epatrickification
    @epatrickificationКүн бұрын

    Such wise words. Some people are really gifted!

  • @codedoer
    @codedoer21 күн бұрын

    Thanks Brad this kind of tips is what im needing now

  • @uimonk
    @uimonk16 күн бұрын

    Happy to see you in good shape.. following u for last 6 years

  • @hebron254
    @hebron25421 күн бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this coz now I know what to do much love from Kenya.

  • @michaelhughes8413
    @michaelhughes84138 күн бұрын

    Great advice. I've been a developer for about 25 years and can agree with lots being said here

  • @yavergazi
    @yavergazi21 күн бұрын

    Brad, you are amazing, thanks for everything

  • @usaava
    @usaava21 күн бұрын

    Totally agree with you. Thanks for your video.

  • @ketan.pkapale3490
    @ketan.pkapale349021 күн бұрын

    Thanks for this! Amazing to see content creators like you exist and gave a rational about programming myths.

  • @realjackofall
    @realjackofall15 күн бұрын

    Another great, honest and relevant video. I can vouch for what you are saying. I'm in my mid 40s and have been a 'jack of all trades master of none' for over 21 years working as a developer/architect and am still a hands on programmer. Hence my username :-). I get into multiple areas not with a hope of being able to apply for many different jobs, but only because I find many areas interesting. Not just in tech, but in life too. As far as tech is concerned, I dive deep into specific areas when required. But you are right. There aren't many takers for such people. Employers in the industry need people who can hit the ground running. Specialists fit the bill there.

  • @ridwanray
    @ridwanray21 күн бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this. Find a niche is the key. Currently, I am doing that on my channel. ❤

  • @anserali551
    @anserali551Күн бұрын

    listen to your channel after long time. Thanks for making me a developer.

  • @mandardeshpande9338
    @mandardeshpande933820 күн бұрын

    Looking great Brad. You are getting into shape. Keep going

  • @XAUCADTrader

    @XAUCADTrader

    19 күн бұрын

    As a gym bro, I approve. Simple thing to do, huge effects in life. You get auto-respect.

  • @rittickdatta1209
    @rittickdatta120913 күн бұрын

    Thank you for your honest opinion 🙏🏼 I learnt a lot from you ❤🎉

  • @vitalikda
    @vitalikda17 күн бұрын

    Looking good, Brad! Such a change in a few years 💪

  • @V-I-sitors
    @V-I-sitors21 күн бұрын

    Thank you for the advises.

  • @eyoborelvis8224
    @eyoborelvis822414 күн бұрын

    Hey @travery... I began coding through your channel.. you're really like my coding godfather.. I love you so so much 🚀🚀🚀🚀😍😍

  • @peacemelodi1145
    @peacemelodi114521 күн бұрын

    Thank you, your video came at the right time.

  • @danieljayne8623
    @danieljayne862321 күн бұрын

    Looking great Brad, good for you

  • @anvarsaidov8964
    @anvarsaidov896421 күн бұрын

    Brad, good to see you, we need more of this face to face tutorials.

  • @alimihakeem841
    @alimihakeem8415 күн бұрын

    Thanks for sharing. I found it helpful.

  • @Web-Himansu
    @Web-Himansu21 күн бұрын

    I loves ❤❤❤ this channel forever. Thanks Brad traversy......

  • @Azubuike-iw9zt
    @Azubuike-iw9zt14 күн бұрын

    I really needed that insight I appreciate 🙏🏽

  • @king-manu2758
    @king-manu275821 күн бұрын

    I became a professional react dev thanks to Brad here. Then in my company, even though I also work with Django on the backend sporadically, I became a react specialist, and not only that, but I also became focused on one aspect of the company's product to such a degree that it saved me from layoffs just because they can't afford to fire me now. So specialization is crucial in many aspects.

  • @thru_and_thru

    @thru_and_thru

    19 күн бұрын

    Any suggestions on how to level up in React? This would be my tool of "specialty" but after about 2 and a half years of working with it exclusively I would consider myself decent but by no means an expert at it. Thanks

  • @king-manu2758

    @king-manu2758

    19 күн бұрын

    @@thru_and_thru I have the same YOE as you so I wouldn't consider myself a mega expert either. I just get the job done. But react is javascript after all. If you want to become an expert, delve deep into javascript and how react is built on top of it.

  • @rkpinata373

    @rkpinata373

    18 күн бұрын

    @@thru_and_thrubuild a larger project you're passionate about. Something that takes at least a month to build. But to really level up you need to work in a real work product, and get feedback from your peers

  • @BlackistedGod

    @BlackistedGod

    18 күн бұрын

    @@thru_and_thru Understand the basic concept of programming and have a deep understanding of the language you are interested in instead of focusing on "framework". Im a self-taught and been coding for more almost 2 decades. For Almost 5 years on my early days, I was too reliant with jQuery and does not fully understand how Javascript works, when these framework started to appear in early days (Angular, React, Vue) I was having a hard time trying to gasp their concept when I tried learning them while also working full time. The same thing with PHP, I was too reliant with CMS like Wordpress, Joomla, Drupal in the early days and when I started learning CoreIgniter/Laravel/Symfony I was lost. The company I worked on my early days was dissolve and I lost my full time job, I was kinda lazy to apply another job with similar position and I want to dig more deeply on programming, so instead of applying full time, I did project basis from here and there then started to leraning compiled languages like C, C++, Java, Rust, Zig, Go, I even tried learning Assembly for the purpose of having deep understanding on how code execution, memory management and multi-threading works, and I can say it was very painful Journey specially when all you know are interpreted language. When I went back learning PHP/Javascript and these popular framework, it becomes really easy and all I have to understand is design of the framework, they all follow the same concept interns of memory management and code execution. Right now, I can confidently say that I can work on any PHP/Javascript framework whatever it is as long as it has documentation, I worked with Vue, Angular, React, Solid, Meteor, Express, Next and some more. Although Im more focus on Vue, Solid and Angular, I can say they are all pretty much the same, they are all "Javascript" and if you have deep understanding with Javascript all you need to understand about them are the builtin function or anything that comes from them and their design pattern.

  • @binhminhtran4605

    @binhminhtran4605

    18 күн бұрын

    @@thru_and_thru there’s a certification for React, called React certified. To pass the test, you need to have deep understanding about JS (hoisting, scope chain, event loop, JS runtime, closure, etc), and React (virtual dom deep dive, React life-cycle, all the hooks, error boundaries, state management in both component and global scope, Redux, React router dom, etc.), Jest for testing, profiller, React compiler, client-side authentication, authorization, bundle size,…. To be more advanced, learn NextJS (rendering patterns, file-based routing, caching, meta data configuration, SEO optimization, etc.), Git, Docker, CI/CD. After that, you can choose to learn another framework like Vue and Nuxt, or React Native for mobile, or NodeJS to become fullstack dev, it’s okay either way, but just React alone is quite unstable and risky for your future

  • @gt_n1722
    @gt_n172221 күн бұрын

    Excellent video, very honest. God bless you sir!

  • @alcprado
    @alcprado4 күн бұрын

    You said it all. I love technology but for the past 5 years I decided to focus on iOS mobile development and recently moved from UIKit to SwiftUI and I keep specializing myself. So far I feel like I have lots of opportunities in the market and salary average is pretty good. Decide your direction and become the best of it but never be closed for changes like I did in my career. Best of luck

  • @darah.k3221
    @darah.k322114 күн бұрын

    One of the best channels and advices

  • @deancoding1623
    @deancoding162318 күн бұрын

    Thank you Brad, I really needed to hear this today, sorry i can't still support on patreon, But I was there for years when i could afford it. Keep being you and i wish the upmost great health and happiness to your whole family..

  • @ranjanadissanayaka5390
    @ranjanadissanayaka539021 күн бұрын

    Very useful video for me. Thank you dude

  • @agadaFrancisLouis
    @agadaFrancisLouis9 күн бұрын

    Bro, you nailed it 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾❤️

  • @wadiibounenni4848
    @wadiibounenni484818 күн бұрын

    Good advice from an humble coder :) Thanks.

  • @pavankumar-of4ew
    @pavankumar-of4ew21 күн бұрын

    We can learn coding skills fast by your good mentorship in explaining the code in js,i am switching from laravel to full stack js

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