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Does your company encourage you to stay up to date with technology you're working with?

###Details

Details

There are many programming languages and frameworks are used nowadays. The developers behind it keeps updating it and releasing new versions. So, if you are working in a company which uses a technology that changes frequently, means if suppose the company you're working for uses Angular 2, then Angular 4 is released later. Did your company encourage you to learn the changes and migrate to Angular 4 or do they want you to stay in the same version because it costs more time and money for them?

Does your company encourage you to stay up to date with technology you're working with?

###Details

There are many programming languages and frameworks are used nowadays. The developers behind it keeps updating it and releasing new versions. So, if you are working in a company which uses a technology that changes frequently, means if suppose the company you're working for uses Angular 2, then Angular 4 is released later. Did your company encourage you to learn the changes and migrate to Angular 4 or do they want you to stay in the same version because it costs more time and money for them?

Does your company encourage you to stay up to date with technology you're working with?

Details

There are many programming languages and frameworks are used nowadays. The developers behind it keeps updating it and releasing new versions. So, if you are working in a company which uses a technology that changes frequently, means if suppose the company you're working for uses Angular 2, then Angular 4 is released later. Did your company encourage you to learn the changes and migrate to Angular 4 or do they want you to stay in the same version because it costs more time and money for them?

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Sagar V
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Does your company encourage you to stay up to date with technology you're working with?

###Details

There are many programming languages and frameworks are used nowadays. The developers behind it keeps updating it and releasing new versions. So, if you are working in a company which uses a technology that changes frequently, means if suppose the company you're working for uses Angular 2, then Angular 4 is released later. Did your company encourage you to learn the changes and migrate to Angular 4 or do they want you to stay in the same version because it costs more time and money for them?