+ 1

Is web development worth it?

I'm thinking about learning web dev but it seems saturated. I'm not much interested in front-end but rather backend or full stack. I like things that required real and hard programming. Reason for web is I want to make web application cause with android app, You can only deploy them in playstore plus also required high end laptop. What do I exactly need to learn to make web apps? Would I need to learn node.js? I like java and once made an app with it... So I'm thinking about learning Java+ Springbot. Ik it's hard but pay is also high. What are all technologies that I exactly need to learn to be full stack developer?

6th Apr 2025, 8:27 AM
Dennis
13 odpowiedzi
+ 1
Yes
6th Apr 2025, 12:50 PM
Michał Mulak
Michał Mulak - avatar
7th Apr 2025, 12:23 AM
BroFar
BroFar - avatar
+ 1
It's worth it. Since you already, know java.
7th Apr 2025, 3:46 PM
𝕡𝕖𝕟𝕘𝕦𝕚𝕟 𝕔𝕠𝕕𝕖𝕣 🐧
𝕡𝕖𝕟𝕘𝕦𝕚𝕟 𝕔𝕠𝕕𝕖𝕣  🐧 - avatar
+ 1
Yeah
8th Apr 2025, 7:03 AM
Jaikee Jiger
Jaikee Jiger - avatar
+ 1
Yes, it's a job that, while AI can affect it, AI cannot replace it like it can so many other jobs
8th Apr 2025, 1:42 PM
Ben
Ben - avatar
0
It's worth it
6th Apr 2025, 12:50 PM
Michał Mulak
Michał Mulak - avatar
0
It is
6th Apr 2025, 8:04 PM
Broly
Broly - avatar
0
It is
7th Apr 2025, 3:42 PM
Uthman Ishola
Uthman Ishola - avatar
0
I think
7th Apr 2025, 9:20 PM
Ming
Ming - avatar
0
Yooo!!!
8th Apr 2025, 4:34 AM
Adarsh Maurya
Adarsh Maurya - avatar
0
Full Stack means you would build the backend (server) and frontend (HTML/CSS/JS that runs in a browser), so if you don't like frontend that'll suck. Modern PWA built with HTML/CSS/JS are perfectly capable of doing most of what a native app can do, but of course there's tradeoffs - open source vs closed source, development speed vs app size and speed, easy backwards compatibility vs decreased forward compatibility, single-threaded vs multi-threaded (though web workers can act like multithreading, it's still "acting like" and not real). Backend dev is very broad with a variety of options, and plenty of things to learn. Frontend doesn't necessarily require HTML/CSS/JS as there are things like React or Svelte, TailwindCSS, etc which can "abstract away" using them directly, but it would be best to actually learn HTML/CSS/JS as these libs/frameworks will go in and out of style over time. The site https://roadmap.sh/ has some well-made "what do I need to learn to be a ____" guidelines which may help you decide.
19th Apr 2025, 6:22 AM
Tom Shaver
Tom Shaver - avatar
0
Yes it is
19th Apr 2025, 6:45 PM
Broly
Broly - avatar
0
Of course people
19th Apr 2025, 10:07 PM
Oyeniyi Precious Momoreoluwa 😎
Oyeniyi Precious Momoreoluwa 😎 - avatar