So what you're saying is that a developer shouldn't learn how to solve problems, they should forcibly learn frameworks because knowing the framework is what matters but learning algorithms / underlying concepts / the language itself (JS) is less important?
Point me to any part of my comment that said that learning framework is more important than learning language / algorithms / problem solving. It was never the question. This topic was about choosing specific framework over those two, never about what is more important.
Obviously without that fundamental knowledge you will struggle badly when it comes to feature implementation, so you should not skip that and also focus on developing your fundamental knowledge in programming. Frameworks are here to give you tools and structure to develop the solution that solves your problem. The solution itself is another matter.
The part where you imply something without explicitly writing it is when you suggest that shoving frameworks in your CV helps one's career. It does not. That's why I expanded on what you implied but did not type.
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
So what you're saying is that a developer shouldn't learn how to solve problems, they should forcibly learn frameworks because knowing the framework is what matters but learning algorithms / underlying concepts / the language itself (JS) is less important?
Point me to any part of my comment that said that learning framework is more important than learning language / algorithms / problem solving. It was never the question. This topic was about choosing specific framework over those two, never about what is more important.
Obviously without that fundamental knowledge you will struggle badly when it comes to feature implementation, so you should not skip that and also focus on developing your fundamental knowledge in programming. Frameworks are here to give you tools and structure to develop the solution that solves your problem. The solution itself is another matter.
The part where you imply something without explicitly writing it is when you suggest that shoving frameworks in your CV helps one's career. It does not. That's why I expanded on what you implied but did not type.