I'm a selftaught (web) developer. On sunny days, you can find me hiking through the Teutoburg Forest, on rainy days coding or with a good fiction novel in hand.
For technologies I have a firm grasp on, I'd always go for new tech stack. It's more fun, challenging and fulfilling altogether.
Wheras legacy codebases provide the essence of years of development. They give insights of how developers implemented features on an existing product. On the downside, if not documented or written as spagetti code, can really mess with your head.
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For technologies I have a firm grasp on, I'd always go for new tech stack. It's more fun, challenging and fulfilling altogether.
Wheras legacy codebases provide the essence of years of development. They give insights of how developers implemented features on an existing product. On the downside, if not documented or written as spagetti code, can really mess with your head.