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For being a relatively new language, there are almost no "entry level" positions.

Just take a look at https://rustjobs.dev/. Most of them are well paid remote jobs, but they are asking for +3 years of "professional experience" with rust, "with a proven track record of building and deploying production-quality code", and more. Hell, iirc, i saw one asking for proof of contributions to the rust repo (eg, being a core maintainer).

edit: to be fair, i saw one position a while ago asking to be willing to learn rust



> For being a relatively new language, there are almost no "entry level" positions.

Isn’t this a fairly well-known phenomenon though?

- new language makes waves. The people who picked it up early do some impressive stuff.

- early early adopter companies either snap them, or internally make the choice to learn it too. In turn, they do some stuff with it.

- gets a reputation for being the hot new thing. Other companies “want in on it”- they want to be able to do the fancy cool things the other places did, but they don’t have the patience, time or culture to grow it themselves so they aim to hire out seniors and everyone with lots of prior experience. <——- many orgs are here.

- proliferates enough that it’s well and truly mainstream. Also known as the “hire 1000 Java devs and throw bodies at stuff” stage of hiring and availability. Python, Node, Java, PHP, etc are here.


Yeah though bear in mind most job requirements are really job desirables. No skilled jobs say "0 years experience, no track record required".

Asking for proof of contribution to the Rust repo is insane though.




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