It’s not an FPS, but Tokyo Jungle is worth checking out if your looking for something like this.
> Git forces you to write your commit message at the end of your coding session You could create a commit and —amend work into it if that is the route you’d like to take.
Peer Reviews (PR’s) are not a personal attack on your competency, but constructive criticism and if they are genuinely toxic reviews, speak up and point it out to another senior or manager.
I use an external keyboard, but I can empathize with people using it as you normally would. I've experienced the dead spacebar and rarely use the built in keyboard.
I've been on both sides of this, having completed and reviewed interview tasks, and I have to say it's absolutely crucial. As an interviewee, it gives you a glimpse of what work will be like once you come on board. Are…
I would like to see this applied to a dating app. Some people turn into complete monsters when faced with rejection.
I almost signed up for that site, only so I could respond to that article. Why kill the platform that can be accessed from devices available to everyone, everywhere. Cross platform support on applications is taxing,…
I used to scan potential candidates Github repos but a recent job changed all that for me. A coworker was struggling at standup to handle a "deep get" in a JS object. I wrote a small function in five minutes and sent it…
I hope nobody uses this article as ammo against TDD. The benefits are not felt immediately but when time comes for maintenance/updates, I'm working on my second port with a company. The first app had fantastic testing…
People need to take the time to learn JS instead of forcing their understanding of programming upon it.
Testing code. I was completely against the idea of writing more code for my code that "worked". But as releases came out validating everything was in order became a pain.
I wish people would take time to actually learn javascript. I used to see it as a shitty toy language up until 2012. It opened me up to a completely different style of programming.
I came here to post this, you're a great person. This post fills me with dread, it's come to the point during code review that I have to be sure the shitty devs aren't coping the bad answers from stackoverflow... I hope…
I thought the exact same thing.
It’s not an FPS, but Tokyo Jungle is worth checking out if your looking for something like this.
> Git forces you to write your commit message at the end of your coding session You could create a commit and —amend work into it if that is the route you’d like to take.
Peer Reviews (PR’s) are not a personal attack on your competency, but constructive criticism and if they are genuinely toxic reviews, speak up and point it out to another senior or manager.
I use an external keyboard, but I can empathize with people using it as you normally would. I've experienced the dead spacebar and rarely use the built in keyboard.
I've been on both sides of this, having completed and reviewed interview tasks, and I have to say it's absolutely crucial. As an interviewee, it gives you a glimpse of what work will be like once you come on board. Are…
I would like to see this applied to a dating app. Some people turn into complete monsters when faced with rejection.
I almost signed up for that site, only so I could respond to that article. Why kill the platform that can be accessed from devices available to everyone, everywhere. Cross platform support on applications is taxing,…
I used to scan potential candidates Github repos but a recent job changed all that for me. A coworker was struggling at standup to handle a "deep get" in a JS object. I wrote a small function in five minutes and sent it…
I hope nobody uses this article as ammo against TDD. The benefits are not felt immediately but when time comes for maintenance/updates, I'm working on my second port with a company. The first app had fantastic testing…
People need to take the time to learn JS instead of forcing their understanding of programming upon it.
Testing code. I was completely against the idea of writing more code for my code that "worked". But as releases came out validating everything was in order became a pain.
I wish people would take time to actually learn javascript. I used to see it as a shitty toy language up until 2012. It opened me up to a completely different style of programming.
I came here to post this, you're a great person. This post fills me with dread, it's come to the point during code review that I have to be sure the shitty devs aren't coping the bad answers from stackoverflow... I hope…
I thought the exact same thing.