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šŸ’” IDEAS Which Web Dev Job Fits You?

when I first jumped into web development, it was like walking into an IKEA for the first time—so many options, zero clue where to start, and somehow you end up with three extra screws. Front-end, back-end, DevOps, UX... it honestly felt like a Netflix menu where you scroll for an hour and still don’t know what to pick. What really got me, though? The fact that this choice is super personal. Some folks vibe with front-end because, duh, making stuff look cool and messing with animations is satisfying. Others are hardcore back-end fans—give them data, logic puzzles, and let ā€˜em cook.

I thought I’d be all about front-end (instant visual feedback, right? Who doesn’t get a kick outta that?), but after wrangling CSS at 2 a.m., surrounded by empty coffee cups and existential dread, I knew... nah, this ain’t it.

Eventually, I slid into full-stack. Not because I wanted to be some superhero coder that does it all, but because, honestly, I hated feeling clueless when stuff broke. Like, if the app crashed, I wanted to fix it, whether it was a front-end hiccup or a server meltdown. Turns out, it’s less about picking the ā€œsexyā€ job and more about what actually clicks with the way your brain works. I’ve got friends who geek out over DevOps (they legit love setting up pipelines and automating all the things), and others who are basically UX therapists, obsessed with how users feel about every pixel. There’s no ā€œrightā€ way to do it. Just your way.

So, if you’re new or stuck in a rut, here’s my not-so-profound wisdom: mess around and see what sticks. Make a landing page, slap together a database, try deploying something (and don’t panic when it fails the first three times). Notice what drives you nuts and what makes you lose hours without even realizing it. Your path might take some weird turns—and that’s half the adventure.

Honestly, what are you itching to try next? Because that’s probably where you should start poking around.
 
First Build yourself well in frontend technologies like html, css, javascript, jquery, bootstrap and backend technologies like java or python and database like mysql. you should have atleast basic understanding of these then prepare for the interview question and search on the websites about interview questions about web development. and while you are studying these topics make a resume and send to your friends for referral and apply through job portals like naukri, linkedIn, foundIt (monster), hashedIn, etc. and keep applying daily atleast 5 companies then you will start getting calls for interview or coding round. after clearing final round you will be able to get the company and the job.
 

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