![]() It will cost you US$100 and a bunch of time. Don't do something hi fallutin but do something simple really well, including smooth animations and a nice looking UI. You should have one app published in the app store under your name. If you're young and don't have enough experience you need to prove you're a person that can deliver. Eventually you'll have a portfolio that will show employers you're a serious contender for a higher level position. ![]() Or just make stuff for yourself, but keep building. Find a niche in the market and build an app for it. My recommendation is to keep making your own projects. IMHO, the true difference between junior and senior is whether you've been tested on enough production projects to know what to do to prevent shit from hitting the fan (and be able to handle it if it does). If they're consumer facing they need senior people who they know can produce and get stuff to market ASAP, or if it's an in-house project they'll probably use an in-house developer with relevant domain knowledge. On the non-web side, the avionics industry hires junior engineers because the projects take a long time to complete and the junior people can learn while still contributing, and eventually become senior people during the course of a project.Ĭompanies rarely have 5-10 year mobile timelines. Anyways, I'm still a couple months out from publishing my first app, so I'll revisit this bridge when I come to it.Ĭompanies hiring for junior position have lots of funding and the need for lots of developers in the long term. But it is nice to get a feel for what's in store. This thread has been enlightening, if not exactly comforting. It's just a bit disheartening to look at sites and see virtually zero openings for junior devs.Įdit: Thank you to everyone who took the time to respond. ![]() I'm a month or two away from finishing my Udacity iOS Nanodegree, which has been a great experience in terms of a structured learning environment. Maybe some senior devs can offer some insight? My theory is that companies who post listings get spammed by recruiters, and bombarded with applications from people who want to learn virtually everything on the job, without having put in any time themselves. So either the jobs aren't posted, or there aren't quite as many jobs for a junior developer as people make it seem. However, reading posts in this subreddit, the impression I get is that these junior jobs do actually exist in abundance. My background: I live in LA, and have no prior professional development experience.īrowsing job listings, it seems there are many more openings for junior web devs than junior iOS or Android devs. Take note that this list is live and based on most frequent questions in posts will be updated with "quicklinks". There's too many to list them all, however here's a convenient link to all programming guides at There is also dedicated subreddit for learning Objective-C: /r/learnobjectivec. ![]()
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