I've been using Flutter for 5 years and I love it. I used before Ionic, Cordova, Angular, React Native, NativeScript... this is by far the best option. I don't care about the market. I use it for my owns app and because I like it.
Never make an informational video that contains the phrase, "if I had to guess." That translates to "I was too lazy to research," or worse, "I didn't care enough to research."
I hate videos with title like these, you should not use title like these since they misguide freshers
In India, there's more openings for flutter than react native and native.
I am a full time flutter developer with around 4 years of flutter experience and I think there is a substantial amount of flutter opportunity and it depends on you to be patient and learn at the same time with hunting for job, Certainly its not very easy but its also not impossible with good portfolio
I really don't remember the last time I saw any mobile dev job posting that didn't ask about Flutter in my country (Bangladesh) In Asia, especially South Asia, Flutter is the first choice for almost every company as most of them are start-ups that are becoming giants
In Brazil Flutter has more job openings than Ruby, Go, Rust, React Native and even PHP
Why you shouldn't make videos like this
flutter can be really used for freelancing things or building side project during free time
Search for what is the most popular/in-demand job in your country and learn it . I believe it different between country and another .
I received multiple job offers as a Flutter Developer. Yearly salary offers ranged from 42'000€ to 95'000€ based in Germany. Also it's super easy to switch from Flutter/Dart to SwiftUI/Swift or Jetpack Compose/Kotlin
I think it depends on the country's market, for example: in Brazil unfortunately native iOS is losing market share and Flutter is growing, there are almost no more opportunities to work with iOS in Brazil, that's why I'm thinking about migrating to Flutter, although I don't really like it.
Framework skills are universal. Generally you only need to learn a subject once after which you can use those skills for all frameworks. You shouldnt focus on one single thing but you shouldnt be worried about missing out on a framework or language because the skills you already have translate easily to any other programming skill.
It almost sounds as the react guys are really trying hard to protect their domain...
It was so much better when everyone coded in C, and there were no tech bros dominating the industry forcing people to grind at their jobs 80 hrs/wk.
After having some discussions about this very topic, it also seems that the popularity of Flutter is very different across continents... I'm from the Netherlands and I get spammed by recruiters a lot.
You didnt highlight any flaw about flutter ... I guess its a perfect framework with social issues😂
I am Java, Machine learning and AI backend engineer, company needed some help with Flutter, so I learned it and tbh it is quite nice. I used to do some frontend before with JS, PHP etc, but Flutter really looks easier to use.
This video is exactly what I was talking to my friends some days ago, and I relate with 100% of this video. I work as a Vue developer and I've been studying and creating Flutter apps since last year. Learned a lot of animations, styles, DB integration, state management, and yet I couldn't get a job, which is my dream to work as a mobile developer. But I know that the main problem here is the lack of flutter jobs. I would say that the reason for this is because flutter is relatively new, so the cost for the companies to rebuild their apps/systems would be big. And of course, there are more native stack jobs like Kotlin or Swift if compared to Flutter, like 3 Kotlin jobs for 1 Flutter job. Of course, I changed my focus from Flutter to a Native stack, so I started to study Kotlin, which has been very fun and easy to learn, but I must be honest and say that I'd love to work with Flutter.
@johan2371