I mean if your answer is always books, then it would make sense that one might not be aware of change. It takes a long time to create a book and things are changing at a much more rapid pace, so your learnt “skill” is no longer relevant in todays job market even though it may be new to you
Every technology or framework is documented somewhere, whether it’s in a book or in its documentation. Once you have the basics, you can update your own knowledge with more books or docs.
I don’t know of any piece of technology that is changing so fast that it’s not documented anywhere. At most you have ReactJS which is a weird usage of JavaScript, but you still can find the docs and learn. Or maybe Unity VS Godot but we’re talking about long term education, not framework fights.
Yes, but the how and where to learn are changing too, which is the problem
My answer is always in books. I don’t really know what changed.
I mean if your answer is always books, then it would make sense that one might not be aware of change. It takes a long time to create a book and things are changing at a much more rapid pace, so your learnt “skill” is no longer relevant in todays job market even though it may be new to you
Every technology or framework is documented somewhere, whether it’s in a book or in its documentation. Once you have the basics, you can update your own knowledge with more books or docs.
I don’t know of any piece of technology that is changing so fast that it’s not documented anywhere. At most you have ReactJS which is a weird usage of JavaScript, but you still can find the docs and learn. Or maybe Unity VS Godot but we’re talking about long term education, not framework fights.
Godot is pretty well documented, idk what you’re talking about.
I never said that it lacked documentation. I said there is a more universal underlying theory that you can learn and which hasn’t changed in years.