"I Wasted Months on Wrong Skills — Here's What Actually Gets You Hired in 2026"
"I know — you've been working hard. Just maybe in the wrong direction. But hey, that ends today." Nobody wants to say it. So I will. 👇 Every year someone posts a "top skills to learn" list. Same a...

Source: DEV Community
"I know — you've been working hard. Just maybe in the wrong direction. But hey, that ends today." Nobody wants to say it. So I will. 👇 Every year someone posts a "top skills to learn" list. Same advice, different year. Learn React. Learn Python. Learn cloud. Fine. But nobody talks about the other side — the skills quietly becoming worthless while beginners spend months on them. This is that post. No sugarcoating. ☕ 💀 Skills That Are Dying (or Already Dead) 1. jQuery jQuery was revolutionary... in 2010. In 2026, it's legacy code you'll encounter in old codebases — not something to actively learn. Modern JavaScript does everything jQuery ever did: // jQuery way (old) $('.btn').on('click', () => { ... }) // Vanilla JS (modern) document.querySelector('.btn').addEventListener('click', () => { ... }) Brutal truth: If jQuery is your main skill, you're optimizing for maintaining 10-year-old projects — not getting hired anywhere building something new. 2. HTML/CSS Alone — Without JavaSc