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What won't work?
Now I'm thinking, what the hell do I need C# for?
I'd rather keep pedalling in java and take a 1C course.
I'll raise it. I'm curious about what I'll get.
1C is visual beisk+accounting
Knowledge of mql4-mql5, some java, city population 400 thousand
If you have "some java", it makes sense to keep going in java.
Imho, jobs in java are more interesting. They can be both interpry and web and even data since. With C#, everything is more modest: Web and ASP Net will prevail.
If age allows (<25 is better <15 (sarcasm)) you may apply to frontend. Some java script or python or any other newlanguage will fit the subject.
As for C# - it's a serious language, many C++ developers are moving to it (Alexey hello!:)). That means you'll have to compete with them for the offer, which means there's not much chance.
Where is this one? The Bitrex marketplace was yesterday. Is there one from 1C as well?
It's like this.
So wouldn't it be better to open your own business and hire programmers?
It is a very thankless job. Often you have to call a lot of potential clients and persuade them to sign a service contract. Many offices look for acquaintances who are willing to help out for a bottle. I myself have done so a hundred times, turned to an acquaintance programmer 1C, the firm's services are very expensive. Of course, the girls do the calls, but they have to pay their salaries. And then there are the taxes, which are also not paid out of thin air. Competition in our market is great, 1C firms are literally elbowing each other. It is much easier for a single programmer to survive than for an entire company.
As far as I know, 1C has an English dialect, but it is not widespread.
Maybe there is, I don't know for sure.
There has been some great analysis on hubra: who earns what, where and how much. You can easily find it.
Another piece of advice: run not for salaries (there are many of you now), but for real skills and abilities. There should be a desire to develop in the area you choose. Because then it will not be easy to change rails.
On the plus side, there is a stable salary well above the RF average.
And the fact that it is a dead-end branch is also a plus! So you don't have to learn something new all the time (small things, maybe). It means a carload of free time for other things/studies/work
Well I don't agree with that plus, I'd rather learn something new.
Well, you can get out of the RF without knowing C#. All you have to do is raise a business in the RF (open a franchisee, since there is such demand) and get the dough out of it. And you can invest in property abroad. And you don't have to code your whole life.
In my view, it is much easier to get out of the RF as a sought-after specialist around the world than to start a business here and leave.
Do you read the General Accounting Office all the time?
I never read it. Something important - the bureaucrats in my organisation do.
Yes, at least you need to know how the postings are formed, so that if the accountants have something that does not add up, you can figure out what postings they have messed up, but they will not admit it themselves :) I will blame everything on the fact that the software does not work correctly.
What I like about 1C is the logging of user actions. You can always see which user did what to a specific object and then, if anything, you can prove where he was wrong.
Yes, you're right, it's very helpful. But the standard log is weak in terms of functionality, I completed my algorithm for recording changes of users, with details - what information was in the field and what has become.