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Comments
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I think you should be careful to show jQuery as a skill. At our company, people who apply for a job are given the question "do you know JavaScript?". If they answer some equivalent to "Yes, I know jQuery", then it's a red flag for us. Too many 'developers' have become too dependant on a library that was great in it's glory days, but nowadays it's much, much more important to understand vanilla JavaScript. I honestly cannot think of anything that jQuery can do that cannot otherwise be done with proper understanding of JavaScript.
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Oh not not at all, in my companys group the division that makes the most money has never heard of git, they still move projects around in thumb drives, no joke.
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W1ckeD7338y@jonnyserra This is so bizarre to me. Shows that being a developer does not mean being efficient and up to date with current workflows. My dad ftps everything to everywhere, it's crazy.
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To be honest, I actually just learned how to with with git while I've been programming for about seven years now
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W1ckeD7338y@linuxxx but at least you know about it and started using it. There are a lot of developers stuck in their ways.
LinkedIn recommends putting jQuery and Git as 'skills' on my profile.
I thought if you write code for the web, these two skills are a given?
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ninja skills