 Should you learn ASP.net in 2021? Well, you reach the right video. Let me explain. This video was brought to you by Digitalink Academy. You're number one source to learning, programming fast, and get to that six-figure freelance salary you desire. Our courses include our secret project course, our freelance Kickstarter, our Python course, and our interview programming course and much, much more. So if you haven't already, go ahead and click the link below to get to our free seven-step freelance guide so that we can help take your career to the next level. I'll see you guys in the course. All right, guys, ASP.net is a very critical framework when it comes to C-Sharp. Should you learn it? Yes. Is this a very critical part of web development? Yes, you should learn it. But the problem is a lot of you guys are spread so thin on what to learn. You just don't know where to focus on. And ASP.net, a lot of other frameworks, PHP, LaraVol, Spring Boot, so many other frameworks out here, you are confused on what to learn first. If you do anything with C-Sharp, ASP.net, web development, ASP.net is the way to go. And we're gonna focus on that today here. So what's the benefit of ASP.net? You guys are probably using a web browser or some kind of application right now, a web-based application. You see the power of web apps. ASP.net gives you all of that in a structure where you can deploy things pretty easily. It's tested, it has structure, it's backed by Microsoft, a lot of good benefits. You need to learn ASP.net. And the enterprise where it's gonna give you a leg up because a lot of people, contrary to popular belief, you got all these new frameworks and applications and programming languages out there. But at the end of the day, Java and C-Sharp are king of the enterprise and that's not gonna change anytime soon. So you need to learn ASP.net. On top of that, you're gonna have a lot of improvements to this as well. You got Microsoft continually adding to the toolbox. So you're gonna always have that company backing that's gonna help evolve this in the application development world. So you need to learn this guys. It's very important that you guys know at the end of the day, you have a tool bag that's gonna be current that you can get a job today and you can go to basically any city in United, any major city in United States. And then you're gonna have some form of a C-Sharp job. Usually you got C-Sharp Java, Python, JavaScript for the front-end developers, some PHP for the freelancers, some legacy stuff with Pearl and what's the other one, Ruby. Not so much of the legacy stuff, but it does exist. But C-Sharp is gonna be always on top of that list alone with CC++ and all that guys. So my point is ASP.net is a good language to learn in 2021. But you have to first of all, are you in the process of trying to get your first development job? You need to find out who need ASP.net in your local region. And if there's a good amount of companies, professional services, hospitals, transportation companies, they're probably gonna use C-Sharp, especially if they're a Microsoft shop, they're probably gonna be having a man for web development. ASP.net is where you wanna be. But there's Marius as well who are Java shops that may not necessarily need ASP.net. But ASP.net, the MVC model, it's easily translated on the Java side because Java and C-Sharp is similar. And then you can use Spring Boot in a similar fashion as well. So there are some benefits there. Find out what your local job market looks like, get you some projects, showcase those projects, find work specifically for the projects you complete. Real-world projects. I'm not talking about Hello World and all that. I'm talking about industry problems that you solved using cold. You need to jump on that guys. But at the end of the day, I can't cover everything in this video. So what I want you guys to do is two things for me. Number one, share your experience below. Have you had problems learning ASP.net? Are there jobs in your region with ASP.net? Do you feel like ASP.net is a learnable framework? Comment below. I wanna know your insights on it. I wanna kinda figure out how people are perceiving ASP.net. I know in the past, especially if you guys did this in the early 2000s, you remember the really buggy versions of ASP.net, those early versions, which was pretty buggy. It was bad, but it's mature to the point to where it's pretty seamless once everything dialed in correctly. You got your systems in place. You kinda worked out some of the initial hurdles and challenges. Everything else works out pretty good at that point, guys. So let's do this. So you're gonna share that with me. Then I'm one thing I need you to do. Number two, if you haven't already, go ahead, link's in the description box to my Seven Step Guide. We jump into ways you can learn fast, create projects and showcase them in an interview, and also be able to find work as well. And if you haven't, if you already signed up for my Seven Step Guide, go check out some of my premium courses, guys. It's gonna help take your career to the next level. You're gonna be able to learn C-Sharp much faster with some of the resources we have below premium courses as well. So go ahead and check those out for me, guys. And we'll help you get started here. So at the end of the day, I like C-Sharp. It's not the most easiest language to learn. It wouldn't be the first language I would get you to learn unless you had a job out of the gate saying if you learn C-Sharp, you will get this job. I always tell people so that I can get you some quick wins. Start with PHP, JavaScript, or Python. Usually PHP, JavaScript, or Python. One of those three languages you learn first because you're gonna get some quick wins. They got some, a huge community online. It's not that intimidating as a Java C-Sharp, but you can really kinda learn how to do it in that non-enterprise world. So any of those three are good programming languages to learn first, get comfortable with programming, learn how to write basic training applications and things like that. Hello world, print stuff to the screen, scripts on automating, open a program, that kind of stuff. Just the whole syntax of programming in the mindset. Once you kinda get those basic fundamentals out of the way to arrays, the variables, all that stuff, then you jump over to C-Sharp ASP.net. Same concept apply, syntax is a little different, but at the end of the day, if you get the basics down, you should be good to go on that. And I feel pretty confident you'll be ready to go on that guys. So it's so much of a challenge for me to give everybody advice about different programming. I'm trying to do a better job at it. Every, you gotta understand that software development is evolving to a point that even though all of us are software engineers or developers, we're specific based off of the industry and the company requirement. So a software developer for Silicon Valley, Fang company, and it could be drastically different than a software developer or software engineer for a professional services company or for a transportation company or for a hospital. Your day-to-day job will be different even though you're using the same programming language. So my point is there's a lot of different ways to become a software developer, but all of them start with getting that syntax together, learning on fundamental solving problems guys, just the basic stuff that most people forget. Y'all get into the tool bag and just think it's all about programming language, programming language, which programming language is a pretty good component of it, but you gotta get into this problem solving, the troubleshooting, identifying the issues and being able to put and bring all that together to become a more solid, a more refined, more mature developer. So at the end of the day, like, subscribe to the content. If you have additional questions, comment below. If you feel like this helped you out, go ahead and let's start a conversation below. Like, subscribe to the content. I'll put a link to my seven step guide here and I'll see you guys in the next video. Peace.