I consider an intersection of people, innovation, and product to be my ikigai. Usually, I build things that work on computers albeit on some days I write, and teach. I'm also an aspiring chef.
After years of fiddling with different languages, I realized that I was okay in most but hardly a true master in any. So I really get what you're saying.
I'd like to be both mobile and full stack and I get OOP. It's because of that that this year I decided to stick to Kotlin for Android and Typescript for web. I'm not where I want to be yet, but let's see how it goes.
If Rumi were a programmer. I'm really good at self-proclaimed manifestos. Too reckless to be an entrepreneur. Open-source fanatic. Bare-metal hardware, virtual machine, and all-computing wisdom.
After years of fiddling with different languages, I realized that I was okay in most but hardly a true master in any. So I really get what you're saying.
I'd like to be both mobile and full stack and I get OOP. It's because of that that this year I decided to stick to Kotlin for Android and Typescript for web. I'm not where I want to be yet, but let's see how it goes.
I think taking detours to learn new things and master nothing is great. I'd even go as far as to argue it's the only way to grow.