Hi Jason Thanks for the reply. I think I am going to continue and finish learning the basics and concepts of Javascript and then I am going to move onto Java. Currently I am doing online training however I am going to start looking out for some class room based training.
So I would assume that one should focus on Java and Javascript for now along with Node which will provide a complete picture. I think it is great that there will be a market place in the future - always great when code can be shared which pushes the entire remedy solution further in the market. Cheers Brad On Sun, Jan 8, 2017 at 11:14 AM Jason Miller <jason.mil...@gmail.com> wrote: > ** > I started learning Java early last year since the platform is now Java as > well as I wanted to be able to write plugins. I also figured it will not > only help with my Remedy career but would also be a good skill to have in > case I need to make a living doing something other than Remedy. Fortunately > the new direction with Innovation Suite aligns very well with that path. I > have added learning AngularJS and even Node.js to my short list of things > to learn in the next month or two. > > One thing to keep in mind (for those that might not know), you do not need > other programming skills to work with Innovation Suite. You can build > views, data models and workflow (processes and rules) today without any > programming. The reason there is so much talk about other programming > languages is because Innovation Suite makes it very easy to use (and reuse) > "components" that give extra functionality that the tool doesn't natively. > The idea is with a little time, the BMC Marketplace (marketplace.bmc.com) > will have components/modules/whatever that others built in other > programming languages (and probably even some built in Innovation Suite) > that you can download and use on your system. > > Jason > > On Sun, Jan 8, 2017 at 12:33 AM, BradRemedy <bradrem...@gmail.com> wrote: > > ** Hi everyone > > > looking at the new innovation solution from bmc, I feel that I need to > start learning some Java and getting ready for what is coming in the > future. > > Over the past few months, I have been learning more JavaScript with plans > to use it on the front end. I have no problem learning new technologies, > however I wanted to check what plans everyone else has going forward. > Are you going to learn Java or are you going to focus on the remedy stuff > only and just get help from a java developer when needed? > > So much to learn and it just feels like I am sprinting on a treadmill and > not getting ahead. > > Any advice / guidance would be appreciated. > > Cheers > Brad > > _ARSlist: "Where the Answers Are" and have been for 20 years_ > > > _ARSlist: "Where the Answers Are" and have been for 20 years_ _______________________________________________________________________________ UNSUBSCRIBE or access ARSlist Archives at www.arslist.org "Where the Answers Are, and have been for 20 years"