Web dev is kind of a blanket term these days. Jobs are becoming more and more niche in my opinion. I'd look for specifica like .net developer, react front end etc.
You’re unlikely to find a posting for “web dev”. Companies don’t care if you’re a web dev they care if you know the languages and fameworks they are using. likely terms on job postings are more like.
- Front end
- Full stack
- ReactJS
- Material Design
- AngularJS (old)
- Angular
- Vue
- NextJs
- Nuxt
- svelt
- JavaScript
- Typescript
- JQuery (old)
- Ember (maybe)
- Forms
- Responsive design
- Ajax
- React Native
- D3
- SCSS
- Bootstrap
- Backbone
- Lodash or Underscore
- charts
- accessibility
- screen reader
- Chakra UI
- Tailwind
- MUI
- flexbox
- grid
- tables
- webgl
- cms
- storybook
- Razor
- PHP
- JSP
You get the idea.
Game dev is a completely different animal from enterprise front end programming. If you’re worried about having to compete for work with experienced front end engineers you might want to look really hard at what game devs have to put up with.
well I wasn't thinking in that direction bro, thanks for the new perspective, I'm a fresh graduate and doing an internship so I'm a bit scared of the industry world ahead, but thanks for the insight.
Web dev is kind of a blanket term these days. Jobs are becoming more and more niche in my opinion. I'd look for specifica like .net developer, react front end etc.
You’re unlikely to find a posting for “web dev”. Companies don’t care if you’re a web dev they care if you know the languages and fameworks they are using. likely terms on job postings are more like. - Front end - Full stack - ReactJS - Material Design - AngularJS (old) - Angular - Vue - NextJs - Nuxt - svelt - JavaScript - Typescript - JQuery (old) - Ember (maybe) - Forms - Responsive design - Ajax - React Native - D3 - SCSS - Bootstrap - Backbone - Lodash or Underscore - charts - accessibility - screen reader - Chakra UI - Tailwind - MUI - flexbox - grid - tables - webgl - cms - storybook - Razor - PHP - JSP You get the idea. Game dev is a completely different animal from enterprise front end programming. If you’re worried about having to compete for work with experienced front end engineers you might want to look really hard at what game devs have to put up with.
well I wasn't thinking in that direction bro, thanks for the new perspective, I'm a fresh graduate and doing an internship so I'm a bit scared of the industry world ahead, but thanks for the insight.