Hi Nathan, being at the beginning of your journey I think it's perfectly normal to hop from one thing to another. There's no written rule that says that you have to become an ultra specialist in one stack and ignore all the others.
People tend to specialize a bit because of a combination of factors: interests, job offers and prospects, (lack of) time, communities around a technology and so on.
Also consider that it's a reversible choice. If you decide to become an expert in one stack that doesn't mean you're "stuck" there forever and ever :-)
You probably haven't found the one you like better than the others and even if you don't find it, you'll be fine. Just remember to learn something well at some point.
Hi Nathan, being at the beginning of your journey I think it's perfectly normal to hop from one thing to another. There's no written rule that says that you have to become an ultra specialist in one stack and ignore all the others.
People tend to specialize a bit because of a combination of factors: interests, job offers and prospects, (lack of) time, communities around a technology and so on.
Also consider that it's a reversible choice. If you decide to become an expert in one stack that doesn't mean you're "stuck" there forever and ever :-)
You probably haven't found the one you like better than the others and even if you don't find it, you'll be fine. Just remember to learn something well at some point.
Generalists are fine :)
in hindsight, I meant to have said a main stack, not just one stack.
thanks for the reply.