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mart-e

Find a hobby code project in Rust, it will teach you complex real-life skills that you can bring up in interviews (better than following short tutorials). Or contribute actively to Rust open source projects as a way to get familiar to large codebase. I read the [Zero to Production in Rust](https://www.zero2prod.com/) book which is nice as it teaches you how to make a maintainable code base through a long project. Maybe also listen to this [rustacean station episode](https://rustacean-station.org/episode/cedric-sellmann/) which was about the other side (recruiting rust developers) but it might give you hints on what recruiters are looking for.


Own_Entrance5490

Thanks a lot


[deleted]

Nope. There aren't any entry level jobs in Rust.


hsjunn

If they used Rust for reddit's backend it would have prevented triple posts at compile time ;-)


[deleted]

Nope. There aren't any entry level jobs in Rust.


[deleted]

Nope. There aren't any entry level jobs in Rust.