I‘m Stefan. I call my self a Full Stack Developer and have been writing code for the last 15 years. Mostly #PHP with #Laravel. Sometimes #vue or #svelte.
Love writing open source packages that solve a particular problem well. I also write long blog posts about how I use certain software on https://stefanzweifel.dev.
When not glued to the desk, I'm enjoying nature, in the gym or in my kitchen cooking or baking for friends and family.
After a Rich Text Editor, I've now implemented a Combobox component that fits in with the Nord Design System. This is in the new frontend for Provet Cloud and is developed with Vue 3 and Nuxt 3.
@jaredwhite’s personal thoughts on a great entry by @collinsworth into the growing body of work which details why greenfield #WebDev projects are better served by other frameworks…or none at all.
Anyone have recommendations for tech podcasts? I'm getting tired of the ones I'm listening to. I am interested in Javascript, Vue, CSS, web development in general, and general industry news.
I like scripted or loosely-scripted shows where only one person is talking at a time and have both diversity and humor. An example is "Enjoy the Vue".
As a someone in the #tech and development space, my peers have always shunned #Wordpress and I have to admit I also steered clear from it simply because I judged it to be a weak, drag-and-drop solution and closed ecosystem.
But I strongly believe my hatred for it has been unfair and without any cause all these years. The fact that it is so popular shows that it is a valid solution, and without it, millions of blogs and small business websites would never have been possible. It is also far less closed and locked in as many of these other solutions Youtube creators often advertise as you can #selfhost it as well.
What is your opinion on it? Do you use it, and what do you use it for? What do you like and not like, and finally, what level of technical skills do you have? Are you a developer or a non-tech-savvy person who found the perfect solution for your website, blog, or e-commerce store?
So you don't find it limiting at some point? I always felt that you can hit the roof with it and then you need to start over, but even creating the simplest site with #React#Vue#Angular or #Svelte could take an exceptionally long time especially for someone like me that doesn't work in #webdevelopment.
@sarajw Eh, I honestly prefer #react, but they're mostly the same. #vue is closer to the old style AngularJS, so there are upsides and downsides, but they both can be either good or bad depending on the people writing components with you.
Folks who do #aspnetcore development with a #javascript frontend framework (#vuejs, #angular, #react), is your frontend code part of the #dotnet solution, or have you split the backend and frontend into separate isolated folders?
I have thoughts, but would love to hear what your thoughts are. Boosts are appreciated.
@khalidabuhakmeh Isolated folders. Usually /api for #dotnet backend and /web for #vue or #react frontend. Makes the build process more obvious and root folders cleaner.
Also if your team has separate roles (dedicated FE), they can load into the /web.
Ich bin auf Arbeit ja nicht nur Full Stack #Webdev, sondern auch Teamlead. Eine meiner Aufgaben (die ich mir selbst gegeben habe) ist, meinem Team teils die Fundamentals von Dingen zu erklären.
Einfach weil heutzutage (Durch Bootcamps, Tutorials und sonst was) viele in den Beruf gehen und direkt mit #Sass, #Symfony / #Laravel, #Vue / #React etc. anfangen. Ohne #CSS, #PHP, #HTML und #JavaScript im Kern richtig kennenzulernen.
Und jedes Mal, wenn ich eine solche Session hinter mir habe, fühle ich mich einfach gut. Meist egal wie es mir vorher ging, danach ist einfach eine positive Grundstimmung in mir.
Wenn ich irgendwann mal keine Lust mehr habe, selbst beruflich als Webdev zu arbeiten, werde ich definitiv versuchen irgendwo als Lehrkraft reinzukommen. Ich kann mir echt vorstellen, dass das etwas ist, mit dem ich glücklich und alt werden könnte.