(Jan-23-2019, 02:10 AM)sneakyimp Wrote: might be tricky to find pygame work if searching on craigslist -- at least in Los Angelespygame is more of an indie developer game software. I doubt i would ever see employers paying people to use it.
(Jan-23-2019, 02:10 AM)sneakyimp Wrote: I think I'd be wise to focus on learning skills specific to the job market rather than chasing the "fun" Rolleyes work of developing games. I'm especially interested in the supposedly lucrative fields of AI, Machine learning, security, and data science. I've finished 10 of 12 chapters in this book and haven't seen any DB interaction, network requests, or website hosting information. Sort of wondering where energy is best invested.If your looking for python employment, data science, networking, databases, etc. would be the things i would learn. I would get familiar with 3rd party libs such as Django, Flask, NumPy, PAndas, Matpoltlib, MySQL, etc. If you want to know what to learn to get a job, look at the job industry demands for python developers and what they should know. But what is required to know heavily depends on the job you are applying for. Pygame is probably not ever going to be one of those though.
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