Coding Blocks
En podcast af Allen Underwood, Michael Outlaw, Joe Zack - Mandage
Kategorier:
238 Episoder
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DevOps: Job Title or Job Responsibility?
Udgivet: 28.10.2019 -
3factor app – Async Serverless
Udgivet: 14.10.2019 -
3factor app – Reliable Eventing
Udgivet: 30.9.2019 -
3factor app – Realtime GraphQL
Udgivet: 17.9.2019 -
The Pragmatic Programmer – How to Build Pragmatic Teams
Udgivet: 3.9.2019 -
The Pragmatic Programmer – How to use Exceptions
Udgivet: 20.8.2019 -
The Pragmatic Programmer – How to Generate Code
Udgivet: 5.8.2019 -
The Pragmatic Programmer – How to Debug
Udgivet: 23.7.2019 -
The Pragmatic Programmer – Know Thy Tools
Udgivet: 8.7.2019 -
The Pragmatic Programmer – How to Estimate
Udgivet: 24.6.2019 -
The Pragmatic Programmer – Tracer Bullets and Prototyping
Udgivet: 10.6.2019 -
The Pragmatic Programmer – Is Your Code Orthogonal?
Udgivet: 27.5.2019 -
The Pragmatic Programmer – The Evils of Duplication
Udgivet: 13.5.2019 -
The Pragmatic Programmer – Investing in Your Knowledge Portfolio
Udgivet: 29.4.2019 -
Should Your Web App be a Progressive Web App (PWA)?
Udgivet: 15.4.2019 -
The Second Date is Always Easier
Udgivet: 1.4.2019 -
Why Date-ing is Hard
Udgivet: 18.3.2019 -
101. What Should You Learn Next?
Udgivet: 4.3.2019 -
100. Tackling Tough Developer Questions
Udgivet: 18.2.2019 -
99. JAMstack with J.A.M.
Udgivet: 4.2.2019
Pragmatic talk about software design best practices: design patterns, software architecture, coding for performance, object oriented programming, database design and implementation, tips, tricks and a whole lot more. You'll be exposed to broad areas of information as well as deep dives into the guts of a programming language. Most topics discussed are relevant in any number of Object Oriented programming languages such as C#, Java, Ruby, PHP, etc.. All three of us are full stack web and database / software engineers so we discuss Javascript, HTML, SQL and a full spectrum of technologies and are open to any suggestions anyone might have for a topic. So please join us, subscribe, and invite your computer programming friends to come along for the ride.