Yeah, that’s tough. The only way out of this that I can think of is to keep practicing other languages and frameworks in your free time, by building your own projects. This way, you could put these languages on your resume and be fully honest about it.
Alternatively, you can do what apparently 99% of job applicants at our company are doing, and lie through your teeth. Normally I’d argue against this approach, but the fact that the vast majority of applicants are doing it is evidence for the viability of the strategy; the fact that people like me actually say stuff like, “It says here you know C#, so let me ask you a basic C# question” is probably just bad luck for them.
Yeah, that’s tough. The only way out of this that I can think of is to keep practicing other languages and frameworks in your free time, by building your own projects. This way, you could put these languages on your resume and be fully honest about it.
Alternatively, you can do what apparently 99% of job applicants at our company are doing, and lie through your teeth. Normally I’d argue against this approach, but the fact that the vast majority of applicants are doing it is evidence for the viability of the strategy; the fact that people like me actually say stuff like, “It says here you know C#, so let me ask you a basic C# question” is probably just bad luck for them.