I have some shared points with you(2,5), besides I want to create something to open source community although it's repetitive but I'll do it. My plans are:
1: Open Source Community:
Create a CMS with Laravel
Create bailing package for Laravel
Create shopping cart package for Laravel
Create mini lodash like in PHP
Create Axios like for PHP cURL
2: Learn and refresh my knowledge:
Focus in Go and Dart
Refresh my JavaScript & PHP knowledge
I'll try to pickup .NET Core at least one hour per week
I am a self-taught developer from Argentina currently living in Spain. I am passionate about improving my technical skills and helping others do the same.
Those are great goals, take a look at my article about deliberate learning. It might give you some ideas how to plan that in order to actually do it :).
Also if you need some help with .net core and C# that is my main line of work so just give me a shout on Twitter and I will help you out.
Best of luck on accomplishing all of this, you can do it!
What were your thoughts on "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs" the first pass through? I have it sitting on my bookshelf and I really intend to read it one of these days...
Also, if you do end up subscribing to FrontendMasters, the author of "Mostly Adequate Guide to Functional Programming" has multiple versions of a series on functional programming in JS, and that might supplement the re-reading of the book!
I am a self-taught developer from Argentina currently living in Spain. I am passionate about improving my technical skills and helping others do the same.
Hey, thank you for that suggestion I will definitely look into it. It is a great book, what I liked the most was first getting to know a little about Lisp dialects(in this case the book uses Scheme), once I understood it, it made me see how beautiful Clojure code is. Second is that since OOP wasn't big when the book was written it just explains functional programming without compromises, not at as an alternative but rather as a proper way of doing computer software. It feels very natural. Give it a try, it is definitely a good book.
I am a self-taught developer from Argentina currently living in Spain. I am passionate about improving my technical skills and helping others do the same.
I wrote a similar article, see programming-decoded.com/2019/12/31..., and was curious what other developers plan to study. Your post gave me some ideas of additional things I could study if I find the time.
I am a self-taught developer from Argentina currently living in Spain. I am passionate about improving my technical skills and helping others do the same.
Glad it helped, I love the content from Christopher, so his series on design patterns is definitely a good one. I am gonna check Khan academy since I am also interested in learning statistics.
I am a self-taught developer from Argentina currently living in Spain. I am passionate about improving my technical skills and helping others do the same.
This is how I feel unfortunately ahaha. I have done backend most of my career and although I have done frontend here and there, I do some Angular now at work I still don't feel completely in my game.
This is a very good solid plan, keep it up. I'm also gonna read sicp again -well I didn't finish it last time-. Also gonna read some haskell goodness (wikibook haskell).
I am a self-taught developer from Argentina currently living in Spain. I am passionate about improving my technical skills and helping others do the same.
That's a great list, even if you don't hit all your goals (or end up changing them as the year goes on) I think it's great exercise to help figure out what you want from your career.
I am a self-taught developer from Argentina currently living in Spain. I am passionate about improving my technical skills and helping others do the same.
I have some shared points with you(2,5), besides I want to create something to open source community although it's repetitive but I'll do it. My plans are:
1: Open Source Community:
2: Learn and refresh my knowledge:
3: Writing and teaching:
Practice my French and start learning German.
Happy New year 🎉🎈
Those are great goals, take a look at my article about deliberate learning. It might give you some ideas how to plan that in order to actually do it :).
Also if you need some help with .net core and C# that is my main line of work so just give me a shout on Twitter and I will help you out.
Thanks!!! I followed you.
Best of luck on accomplishing all of this, you can do it!
What were your thoughts on "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs" the first pass through? I have it sitting on my bookshelf and I really intend to read it one of these days...
Also, if you do end up subscribing to FrontendMasters, the author of "Mostly Adequate Guide to Functional Programming" has multiple versions of a series on functional programming in JS, and that might supplement the re-reading of the book!
Hey, thank you for that suggestion I will definitely look into it. It is a great book, what I liked the most was first getting to know a little about Lisp dialects(in this case the book uses Scheme), once I understood it, it made me see how beautiful Clojure code is.
Second is that since OOP wasn't big when the book was written it just explains functional programming without compromises, not at as an alternative but rather as a proper way of doing computer software. It feels very natural. Give it a try, it is definitely a good book.
Subscribed to frontend masters and already checking his hardcore functional programming course, thank you for the heads up.
I wrote a similar article, see programming-decoded.com/2019/12/31..., and was curious what other developers plan to study. Your post gave me some ideas of additional things I could study if I find the time.
Glad it helped, I love the content from Christopher, so his series on design patterns is definitely a good one. I am gonna check Khan academy since I am also interested in learning statistics.
What’s up with “backend guy who does frontend” 😆 just curious.
This is how I feel unfortunately ahaha. I have done backend most of my career and although I have done frontend here and there, I do some Angular now at work I still don't feel completely in my game.
This is a very good solid plan, keep it up. I'm also gonna read sicp again -well I didn't finish it last time-. Also gonna read some haskell goodness (wikibook haskell).
Don't forget to contribute with some FLOSS
Best of luck.
Thank you very much
That's a great list, even if you don't hit all your goals (or end up changing them as the year goes on) I think it's great exercise to help figure out what you want from your career.
Yeah indeed, 2019 I accomplished so much and I think it's because of this practice. Thanks Joe. Btw big fan of your podcast 😀