@santimirandarp Like @TemaniAfif I recommend learning Bootstrap to get a little familiar with it. It's included by default in a lot of projects in Visual Studio, for example, and a lot of web shops use it across their portfolios, too, just because it puts a lot of the work in for you.
You are probably significantly more marketable as a web dev if you are familiar with Bootstrap vs being unfamiliar with it.
And if you're good enough to do without it and write stuff from scratch, you probably know that already and are already an experienced freelancer/dev
user7437554
4:57 PM
@TylerH thanks both for the feedback guys. I've started both javascript and bootstrap
user7437554
though I need to get a job in the meanwhile or I'll be back to do waitering haha
@santimirandarp the beautiful thing about programming is you can easily learn it in your off-time while working any other job (so long as you have a computer and access to the internet)
I say 'easily', of course it takes hard work and determination, but it's something you can often go quite far in learning without help from a mentor or in a structured learning environment like a school or on the job