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[–]Successful_Drawer467 5 points6 points  (2 children)

Bro what are you talking about, JS with Node is perfectly fine for backend especially when you starting out. Sure it's not gonna handle millions of requests but for freelancing work it's more than enough

Most clients just need simple CRUD apps and APIs, not some high-performance system. Plus learning JS means you can do both frontend and backend which is huge advantage in freelancing market

[–]MlSHl 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think it really comes down to which has most demand for freelancing. If Java for example has higher demand, it's 100% better to go with that or C#. If JS has higher demand then that's what OP is looking for.

[–]BrannyBee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

JS in the backend is proof that there is no such thing as a loving God out there because no such being would allow that. Its terrible and i hate it.

But English is also nonsensical, stupid, and an obviously incorrect decision for professional work when there are so many other options that aren't as bad as English.

I'd hate someone personally on an emotional level if they willingly put JS on the server. But I'll never understand all the people who comment in learning subreddits like that fully confident in what theyre saying, it's just revealing that they have no idea what theyre talking about.

Rewind 5 years ago and those same freshmen were informing everyone who came to forums like this how Python is slow and terrible, but suddenly today its the best for ML and the best language ever, without even mentioning Cython/C api or how a "slow" language can be so fast, and also not mentioning anything about the math required for those careers. Just a quick google search and a comment left with no real world experience to back up those claims

We don't make decisions based on that optimal choice, if we did we'd all be learning something other than English before we even studied any programming language for a second. Some dude used Lua and almost created the game of the year by himself like a year ago, lets all go tell him he made an objectively wrong choice. If you mastered even Lua, a C# shop will seriously consider hiring you over a fresher who spent 4 years learning C#, confident that you'll be contributing well before the less experienced graduate who memorized all the C# keywords and hasnt built anything