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NFT Developer with React Salary in 2024

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Total:
49
Median Salary Expectations:
$6,531
Proposals:
1

How statistics are calculated

We count how many offers each candidate received and for what salary. For example, if a NFT developer with React with a salary of $4,500 received 10 offers, then we would count him 10 times. If there were no offers, then he would not get into the statistics either.

The graph column is the total number of offers. This is not the number of vacancies, but an indicator of the level of demand. The more offers there are, the more companies try to hire such a specialist. 5k+ includes candidates with salaries >= $5,000 and < $5,500.

Median Salary Expectation – the weighted average of the market offer in the selected specialization, that is, the most frequent job offers for the selected specialization received by candidates. We do not count accepted or rejected offers.

NFT

NFT in crypto

An NFT (Non-Fungible Token) is a unique asset on a blockchain that signifies ownership of a digital piece of art, audio or video file. In contrast to mass-produced cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin which can be traded interchangeably, NFTs represent unique units that cannot be passed off as identical products; you cannot exchange your Eminem NFT for another: it is non-fungible and unique. NFTs can act as registration certificates that create a digital chain of ownership, although proof of ownership alone does not equate to actual ownership.

As NFTs have sprung up and blossomed lately, they’ve started to radically shift the paradigm of what it means to own digital goods and the inherent value they carry. This has also given rise to hundreds of NFT marketplaces – essentially, websites that serve as digital storefronts to exhibit, trade, or buy NFTs. The technology behind them seems to have found a niche, and it’s got wide-ranging applications.

What are NFT marketplaces?

These are where NFTs can be stored, displayed, traded, and often even minted (ie, created). NFT marketplaces are to NFTs what Amazon or eBay are to goods.

To access and use these types of marketplaces, you will want to set up the following:

  1. A crypto wallet: you’ll need this to hold your crypto tokens, essentially your digital wallet, which must be compatible with a network on which the NFTs you want to buy/sell are held (below). For example, if you’re planning on buying, selling, or minting NFTs that are based on the blockchain network called Ethereum, then you will need to get a compatible Ethereum wallet such as MetaMask.
  2. How many coins are in your virtual wallet? If you want to purchase, publish, or mint an NFT, you’re going to have to put some money into your crypto wallet. Once again, it depends on what marketplace you’re planning to use – you’ll need to find out which cryptocurrencies they support.
  3. A user account: You need to create an account on the chosen market where NFTs are being bought and sold.

However, creating and listing an NFT on a marketplace generally means paying a blockchain network fee. The cost depends on the blockchain-native system you’re using. Ethereum enables the largest ecosystem of NFT dapps (decentralized applications) but has the highest fees.

NFT blockchain options

Note how the leader here is Ethereum: it is by far the most used system for purchasing selling and creating unique items that are solely held digitally. There are, however, other competitors on the market too: note the following:

  • Binance Smart Chain
  • Flow (by Dapper Labs)
  • Tron
  • EOS
  • Solana
  • Polkadot
  • Tezos
  • Algorand
  • Cosmos
  • WAX

How do these marketplaces work?

Signing up

Joining an NFT marketplace will look slightly different from site to site, but in general, you just need to create an account (or ‘sign in’ using one that you already have) or you might be able to just use a wallet that the NFT marketplace supports (or a new one you created for the purpose). You’ll be directed to a page where you Connect your wallet. Once your wallet is connected, you’ll be prompted to enter your wallet password (if it’s not auto-filled) to complete the process.

Buying an NFT

NFTs are bought outright for a certain price, through an auction, or (in some cases) presented to a specific owner and another bidder may make a bid in an attempt to acquire the asset at a lower price.

Selling an NFT

Selling is more technically complicated, especially for someone selling an NFT they’ve created themselves (an artwork, a soundtrack, a tweet, etc).

It means that you have to upload this individual digital asset to the platform and add a fixed price on it, or let the buyer bid for it during an auction.

Then the asset will be verified by the platform and can be listed for sale.

When the seller agrees with a bid, the marketplace executes the transfer from the buyer to the seller.

Minting an NFT

A potential first step toward minting an NFT might be Ethereum, which remains the most prominent system on which such tokens are used. You need an Ethereum wallet with native support of ERC-721 (the Ethereum token standard underpinning NFTs). One such wallet is MetaMask or also Trust Wallet or Coinbase Wallet. You also need to stash about $50-$100 of ethers in your wallet to cover transaction costs (the higher the network congestion, the steeper the fees).

After doing so, you can then begin using OpenSea, Rarible, or any other such platform. Usually, to open the dashboard where you can start minting, you’ll press a button in the top-right corner that reads ‘Create’ or similar.

Types of NFT marketplaces

Within this ecosystem, there are different types of marketplaces: the universal types, like OpenSea, are the most general, the art-focused ones are specialized, and then there are niche ones that list specific traits of non-fungible assets, such as in-game items, digital collectible cards, or virtual real estate.

Here are some popular universal and digital art-oriented NFT marketplaces currently available:

  • OpenSea: The most established universal NFT marketplace is here at OpenSea, where you’ll find non-fungible tokens representing ownership of things as diverse as art, sporting collectibles, virtual worlds, trading cards, and domain names.
  • Rarible: purchasing it enables replicated purchasing by others below it on the chain It’s an NFT marketplace where you or anyone else can make an NFT on one of three different blockchains, either Ethereum, Tezos, or Flow.
  • SuperRare: A similar market is online at SuperRare, which specializes in digital art and works only with a handful of concept artists. Each work on sale is a unique one-of-one NFT.
  • Nifty Gateway: Nifty is one of the biggest marketplaces for NFT objects. There you will find artwork from prominent artists, including the owner of the record for the most expensive NFT sold at $69 million – Beeple, and the electronic music producers Steve Aoki and deadmau5.

These are all things that could be swept up in the definition of an NFT. Still, for niche digital goods such as virtual world avatars or digital trading cards for games like fantasy football, there is a distinctly growing number of platforms vying for the attention of each digital market there – but the majority of retail NFT sales are still conducted on five platforms:

  • NBA Top Shot: an NFT marketplace on Flow for buying and selling digital collectible cards of videos of memorable NBA ‘moments’.
  • Axie Infinity: These are based around a digital game called Axie Infinity, in which people breed, battle, and trade cartoon pets called ‘Axies’, and in which some play professionally for a living.
  • Sorare: tokens representing football players you can use in the fantasy football game Sorare.
  • Decentraland features an in-house marketplace where players can buy and sell virtual land, in-game items such as wearables, and other digital experiences.
  • Treasures: A website that lets users tokenize a tweet and then sell it as an NFT. For example, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey sold his first tweet for $2.9 million.

Where is React used?





Social Media Shenanigans



  • React powers the Big Blue – yes, Facebook itself. Keeps your aunty's cat pics scrolling smooth as butter.



The E-Commerce Escapade



  • Online shopping addicts rejoice! Sites like Shopify are React-made to handle your midnight retail therapy.



Interactive Intensity in Games



  • Gaming platforms level up with React, giving interactive experiences without rage-quitting load times.



The Mobile Merger



  • React Native extends its tentacles into mobile apps, blurring the line between web and mobile app wizardry.


React Alternatives

 

Vue.js

 

Progressive JS framework for building user interfaces & single-page applications. Lightweight & flexible with a component-based architecture.

 



// Example: Defining a component
Vue.component('todo-item', {
props: ['todo'],
template: '{{ todo.text }}'
})



  • Easier learning curve than React.

 

  • Flexible integration with other libraries.

 

  • Good documentation.

 

  • Potentially lower performance for very large applications.

 

  • Smaller community and ecosystem.

 

  • Less corporate backing compared to React.




Angular

 

Platform and framework for building client-side applications using TypeScript. Full-scale data binding and dependency injection.

 



// Example: Component definition
@Component({
selector: 'app-root',
template: '

{{title}}

'
})
export class AppComponent {
title = 'Hello World';
}



  • Robust framework with strong typing.

 

  • Comprehensive feature set (routing, forms).

 

  • Corporate backing by Google.

 

  • Steep learning curve due to complexity.

 

  • Verbose and complex code structure.

 

  • May be overkill for small projects.




Svelte

 

Compiler-based framework that generates efficient code to update DOM. Emphasizes less code and leaner project structures.

 



// Example: Defining a reactive variable
<script>
let name = 'world';
</script>

<h1>Hello {name}!</h1>



  • No virtual DOM - updates are applied directly.

 

  • Enhanced reactivity with cleaner syntax.

 

  • Reduced boilerplate code.

 

  • Smaller community, fewer resources.

 

  • Less mainstream, could impact hiring.

 

  • Tooling is less mature compared to React.

 

Quick Facts about React

 

React's Debut as a Game-Changer

 

Imagine a world where web pages are as rigid as a starched shirt. Then 2013 hits, and Facebook says 'nah' and spins the game on its head with React. Birthed by Jordan Walke, a software engineer with a craving for dynamism, React splashes onto the scene. It's not just any old JavaScript library—this baby introduces JSX, a quirky syntax marriage between JavaScript and HTML, which lets developers talk to the UI like it's an old pal. Fun Fact: React was first used on Facebook's newsfeed in 2011 before becoming open-source!



Virtual DOM – React’s Secret Ninja

 

Gone are the days of the clunky, old-school DOM. React developers don a ninja mask with the Virtual DOM—a crafty shadow clone technique. Anytime something changes, this sneaky doppelganger updates ninja-fast without needing to disturb the entire DOM. It's like changing your socks without having to redo your entire outfit—smooth and efficient. This cool trick leaves other libraries in slow-mo, eating React's pixel dust.



The Rise of Hooks in React's Saga

 

Flash forward to 2018: React developers are chillaxing when suddenly React v16.8 drops, and BOOM—Hooks explode onto the scene. These little wonders let devs use state and other React features without writing a class. It's like having cheat codes for state management and side-effects. With a flick of a useState or useEffect, you're Harry Potter, casting spells in your functional components. No more class warfare. Magic!




function Example() {
const [count, setCount] = useState(0);

useEffect(() => {
document.title = `You clicked ${count} times`;
});

return (

You clicked {count} times



);
}

What is the difference between Junior, Middle, Senior and Expert React developer?


































Seniority NameYears of ExperienceAverage Salary (USD/year)Responsibilities & Activities
Junior0-2$50,000 - $70,000

  • Fixing simple bugs

  • Implementing straightforward components

  • Writing unit tests

  • Participating in code reviews

  • Learning codebase and standards


Middle2-5$70,000 - $100,000

  • Developing new features

  • Refactoring code

  • Optimizing performance

  • Assisting juniors

  • Maintaining project documentation


Senior5+$100,000 - $140,000

  • Architecting complex systems

  • Leading project modules

  • Conducting technical interviews

  • Mentoring juniors and middles

  • Participating in high-level decisions


Expert/Team Lead8+$140,000+

  • Setting technical direction

  • Ensuring project meets deadlines

  • Facilitating cross-team collaboration

  • Resolving high-impact issues

  • Guiding continuous improvement processes


 

Top 10 React Related Tech




  1. JavaScript (Sure, duh!)


    Imagine trying to build a house without bricks. That's coding React without JavaScript. It's the Numero Uno, the backbone, the very essence of React. It's like the air for breathing or the water for a fish—absolutely essential, non-negotiable, and omnipresent in the React universe.




  1. React (The Star of the Show)


    The belle of the ball, the main squeeze, the showstopper. React's like that cool kid everyone wants to sit with at lunch. It brings components to the party, dances with JSX, and plays well with state and props.




    const Greeting = () => <h1>Hello, React World!</h1>;




  1. Redux (State’s Guardian)


    When your states are more scattered than your thoughts on a Monday morning, Redux is the hero that swoops in. It's the keeper of states, the maestro conducting the symphony of actions, reducers, and stores.




    import { createStore } from 'redux'
    let store = createStore(todos, ['Use Redux'])




  1. TypeScript (JavaScript with a Monocle)


    It’s JavaScript who went to private school. TypeScript adds type-checking to keep your code as tight as your grandma's knitting. Messy types will have nowhere to hide!




  1. HTML/CSS (The Fashion Designers)


    Without HTML/CSS, your React components would be wandering the digital world naked. They give your app the style, the sass, the pizzazz! It's the makeover crew for your JSX elements.




    const divStyle = {
    color: 'blue',
    backgroundImage: 'url(' + imgUrl + ')',
    };
    <div style={divStyle}>Stylish!</div>




  1. React Router (The Path Finder)


    Ever been lost in a new city? React Router is your GPS in the React metropolis. It'll navigate you through the concrete jungle of components without breaking a sweat.




  1. Webpack (The Packing Genius)


    Imagine packing for vacation with a space limit. Webpack's that genius who fits a month's stuff into a backpack. It bundles up your assets, minifies them, and serves them fresh.




  1. Babel (The Translator)


    It's like your polyglot friend who speaks modern JavaScript, but also translates it to a language your grandpa’s browser can understand. It ensures the cool new features you use are comprehensible to the ancient digital beings.




  1. ESLint (The Code Nanny)


    It's the stern governess for your code, keeping it clean and proper. ESLint will wag its finger at you for any code mischief and make sure your syntax is as neat as a pin.




  1. Jest (The Test Master)


    With Jest, your React components get their own personal drill sergeant ensuring they’re fit for service. Jest runs them through the gauntlet of tests and tells you if they're up to snuff or if they need to hit the gym.




    test('two plus two is four', () => {
    expect(2 + 2).toBe(4);
    });

 

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