I'm a former teacher writing articles about software development and everything around it. My ambition is to provide people all around the world with free education and humorous reading.
I'm a former teacher writing articles about software development and everything around it. My ambition is to provide people all around the world with free education and humorous reading.
Yes this is great, I just hope that enough people read this and understand it. You did a good job explaining, but I fear that a lot of developers lately are more driven by opinions, than actually learning how to properly write code. :( but maybe I'm being too pessimistic :P anyways, great post! 👍
I'm a former teacher writing articles about software development and everything around it. My ambition is to provide people all around the world with free education and humorous reading.
I'm afraid you are right as well. Even if people read this they might forget about it soon and never follow it. Especially when they in practice often are payed for closing Jiras quicky, as that is what is most visible work.
What they forget about though, apart from technical debt and bugs, is that learning is what makes you grow and what makes work interesting.
I've been programming for so long, a lot of principles like these I've learned myself, sometimes by reading, sometimes the hard way. Before I ever heard of their names. Or, often, the same principle gets reinvented or renamed from one decade to the next. So I go into interviews, they ask me about one or another, and I'm mystified. But, programming, I follow them without thinking, or refactor my code that way if appropriate for the situation, or refactor old code that way.
I guess I just have to memorize the names du jour.
👨💻 I am Software Developer with expertise in Javascript, React.js, Next.js. I am proficient in using git for version control, and Docker for deployment. 🌱 In my free time, I love exploring
This article is insane. I feel like I am interacting my senior developer and learning from conversations 🤗🤗
Thanks Basavaraja :) Nice to hear comments like this
Please let me know if you like this kind of content :)
I'm learning React and this was very helpful! I really like that you added the "why you should do this" in there.
Yes this is great, I just hope that enough people read this and understand it. You did a good job explaining, but I fear that a lot of developers lately are more driven by opinions, than actually learning how to properly write code. :( but maybe I'm being too pessimistic :P anyways, great post! 👍
Glad you appreciated what you read :)
I'm afraid you are right as well. Even if people read this they might forget about it soon and never follow it. Especially when they in practice often are payed for closing Jiras quicky, as that is what is most visible work.
What they forget about though, apart from technical debt and bugs, is that learning is what makes you grow and what makes work interesting.
I've been programming for so long, a lot of principles like these I've learned myself, sometimes by reading, sometimes the hard way. Before I ever heard of their names. Or, often, the same principle gets reinvented or renamed from one decade to the next. So I go into interviews, they ask me about one or another, and I'm mystified. But, programming, I follow them without thinking, or refactor my code that way if appropriate for the situation, or refactor old code that way.
I guess I just have to memorize the names du jour.
Very well compiled. Kudos!
Great article!
beautiful
Great article!
Every react developer should read this.
Great , very easy to understand for beginners
Great article!
This is wonderful. Thank you
Very useful
lovely