1C programming or C# (or what else?)? - page 3

 
Evgeniy Zhdan:

Do you have similar experience as a 1C programmer? Or do you just think so?

My neighbour has been working as a 1C programmer in Moscow for 5 years now. And he originally went for a specific job at British Petroleum, i.e. not just anywhere.

 
Georgiy Merts:

I've always been amused by this approach - "I'm going to learn 1C (C++, C#, Perl, Pyton - underline it) and get a job, make a lot of money...

What's the right approach - I'll study, get a job, and then I'll suck my dick?

If you don't aspire to earn a lot of money, you'll never earn it...

 
I am working as a 1C-nician. I have 5 years of experience. I write about myself. I work in a city with a population of 1.3 million people. The average salary of a good 1S specialist is +-100 thousand roubles. 1C is a dead-end street for professionals. In my town there is a severe shortage of specialists on the market, because everyone is moving from the regions to the centre, so the demand for specialists is high. If you start in 1C, then only through a franchisee (get a job in a major franchisee and grow as a specialist there, and then choose where to go from there). If I were the author, I would choose C#, simply because there is demand abroad, and it is great to have options for where to leave Russia.
 
Mikhail Mitin:
I work as a 1C technician. Experience of 5 years. I write about myself. I work in a city with a population of 1.3 million people. The average salary of a good 1-Consultant is +-100 thousand rubles. 1C is a dead-end street for professionals. In my town there is a severe shortage of specialists on the market, because everyone is moving from the regions to the centre, so the demand for specialists is high. If you start in 1C, then only through a franchisee (get a job in a major franchisee and grow as a specialist there, and then choose where to go from there). If I were the author, I would choose C#, simply because there is demand abroad, and it is great to have options for getting out of Russia.

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.

 
Mikhail Mitin:
I work as a 1C-nickel. Work experience of 5 years. I write about myself. I work in a town of 1.3 million people. The average salary of a good 1S specialist is +-100 thousand roubles. 1C is a dead-end street for professionals. In my town there is a severe shortage of specialists on the market, because everyone is moving from the regions to the centre, so the demand for specialists is high. If you start in 1C, then only through a franchisee (get a job in a major franchisee and grow as a specialist there, and then choose where to go from there). If I were the author, I would choose C#, simply because there is demand abroad, and it is great to have options for getting out of Russia.

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 a 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.

 
Evgeniy Zhdan:

What's the right approach - will I graduate, get a job and suck my dick?

If you don't aspire to earn a lot of money, you'll never earn it

Wouldn't it be better to open your own business and hire programmers?
 
Evgeniy Zhdan:

It means not having to learn something new all the time (small things, maybe). This means a lot of free time for other activities/studies/work

alas, you'll constantly be learning new things, but not about programming, but about law.

You won't be reading about abstract classes in Java, but rather about the "Glavbukh" magazine

))))

Andrei:
Wouldn't it be better to open your own business and hire programmers?

but programmers need to be trained, since every third middle-class programmer is supposed to be able to push the buttons and correct forms in 1C, but who will be able to answer the customer's stupid questions? ))))

 

Igor Makanu:

Who will answer the customer's stupid questions? ))))

That's what a business owner is for, not a programmer. ))

 
Mikhail Mitin:
I work as a 1C-nician.

Do you read Glavbuch all the time?

 
Evgeniy Zhdan:

Do you read the General Accounting Office all the time?

You don't have to read it all the time. Sometimes you will have to change your 1C configuration in case of significant changes in legislation. Some parameters can be changed by changing constants (e.g. VAT amount), or the changes may be so global that you have to make changes to the configuration.

Reason: