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I used to work as a cheapo part-time-on-paper software developer to pay for university. All devs in the company were student workers and the quality of the work reflected that. That clown show of a job actually took so much of my energy and attention that it delayed my thesis by two years. Yikes.
My boss was straight up delusional. Among his many bizarre ideas was the assumption that I'd stay on for about nine months after my graduation, obviously for the absurdly low pay I was making as a student. That arrangement would've worked out very well for him so he assumed I'd be all for it.
Unfortunately for him, I was already working out the terms of my employment with another company. On the other side of the country. Who actually employed real full-time devs for real market-rate pay. There was no chance I'd stay on for longer than necessary.
So I hand-delivered my written resignation, effective in two months – that being the legal minimum notice period based on my employment duration at the time. Boy, was he upset. He thought we had an agreement (that I never agreed to) and that I'd take as much time as needed to finish up that major project we'd recently started (because clearly that's a reason to work for pennies).
Hell no. I did tell him I'd reconsider... if he beat the other company's offer. That would've meant a 200% pay rise. Suddenly he was much more amenable to my leaving.
What country are you in? I'm not aware of any with any legally mandated notice time (mine is explicitly opposite--employment is "at-will")
Germany.
The minimum notice time scales with employment duration (if the company terminates the contact) or is four weeks (if the employee quits). However, the contact can state a longer period; this is often done to make the notice time symmetrical. The notice period for the employee can never exceed that for the company. Usually, contacts can only be terminated effective at the end of a month so that can extend things a bit further.
At-will employment is not a thing in Germany except for informal arrangement like paying the neighbor's kid to mow the lawn. Even during the trial period (a period of typically six months at the start of an employment where firing the employee is much easier) two weeks are the absolute minimum.