|
|
|
|
|
by jjnoakes
3573 days ago
|
|
For now maybe. But I think it is short sighted to think that trend is guaranteed to continue. Down the road, as other developers pick up different paradigms and can potentially implement the same features you are writing, with a fraction of the bugs and in a fraction of the time, why would companies keep paying you six figures? |
|
Learn all you like, it's a great idea and makes you a versatile developer ("for some, X is great"), but don't ignore a very real part of the world where versatility is literally a non-issue, and being able to maintain an aging codebase without suggesting changes is what gets you set for life. Claiming that "everyone should X" ignores the real world.