AiA 216: Building a Complete Web Application from Scratch Alone with Amir Tugendhaft
Adventures in Angular20 Marras 2018

AiA 216: Building a Complete Web Application from Scratch Alone with Amir Tugendhaft

Panel:
- Aaron Frost
- Brian Love
Special Guest: Amir TugendhaftIn this episode, Aaron and Brian talk with https://twitter.com/amirtugi who is a web developer who is located in Israel. He finds much gratification developing and building things from scratch. Check out today’s episode where Aaron, Brian, and Amir talk about just that. Other topics include UI Design, Flexbox, UX design, PrimeNG, and ag-Grid.Show Topics:0:00 – Advertisement: https://angularbootcamp.com 0:52 – https://medium.com/@frosty/preparing-to-become-a-gde-752b551c88df Welcome! Today’s panel is myself, Brian, and our guest is https://twitter.com/amirtugi 1:13 – Guest: I am a developer and experience with Angular and React.1:56 – Host: You spend your days/nights there?2:03 – Panel: He is committed.2:08 – Host: I am going to back up a second, and Brian could you please introduce yourself, please?2:26 – https://twitter.com/brian_love?lang=en I am the CETO at an Angular consulting firm (Denver, CO). We have the pleasure with working with Aaron from time-to-time. My Twitter handle is https://twitter.com/brian_love?lang=en – check it out!2:52 – Host: What is CETO stand for?2:59 – Brian answers the question. Brian: I oversee the crew among other things.3:31 – Host: What do you want to talk about today, Amir? You are the guest of honor today!3:40 – Guest.4:00 – Host: That is a lot of information – that might be more than 1 episode. We have to stay focused!4:14 – Host: I read one of your recent blogs about Cross Filled Violators. I met you through your blog before we did theHost: Give us your own ideas about starting your own app.4:50 – Guest answers the question. 6:17 – Host: I am biased. But here is a fact. I used to work on a large team (60 people) and everyone committing to the same page app. We were using Angular.js 1.5, which I think they are still using that. I know that it worked but it wasn’t the easiest or fastest one to maintain, but it worked.7:05 – Brian.7:10 – Host: What are you trying to do? React doesn’t fulfill that need. I think you are being hyperballic and using extreme cases as the norm. Let’s be honest: we do cool stuff with jQuery plugins when we didn’t have a framework. When they say that the framework is stopping them then I say: I agree to disagree.8:00 – Host: What do you think, Amir?8:04 – Guest: I don’t have preferences. I try to build applications through the technologies and create components and simple applications.8:30 – Brian.8:33 – Guest: You create the component, and then...9:21 – Brian: You don’t have to have a template file and another file – right?9:35 – Guest.9:48 – Host: I do in-line styles and in-line templates. One thing I learned from React is that I like my HTML, style and code. I like it being the same file as my component. I like that about that: I like single file components. This promotes getting frustrated if it gets too big. Yeah if it’s more than 500 lines than you have to simplify. That’s one of the things that l like.10:47 – Brian: Modules versus...10:55 – Guest.11:07 – Host: I think in https://reactjs.org and https://vuejs.org you have the word module but in JavaScript you have a file that exports...11:26 – Host: I have my opinion here and talking with Joe. He made a good point: at a certain level the frontend frameworks are the same. You could be doing different things but they basically do the same thing.13:57 – Guest: Basically what that means is that the technology used it will do the same thing. Your patterns and practices are huge.14:17 – Brian: If you are talking about the 3 popular frameworks out there – they are basically doing the same thing. I like Angular a little big more, though. Like you said, Aaron, people tend to pick the same one. I like the opinionated things about Angular. You get properties, components or called props or inputs you are getting a lot of the same features. It comes down to your personal preference.15:31 – Host: What else Amir?15:35 – Guest: Let’s talk about the UI.16:05 – Brian.16:08 – Guest asks a question. 16:25 – Brian: How have you tackled this problem?16:34 – Guest: I kind of ran with it. If there wasn’t something that I liked I started from scratch, because it really didn’t feel right.16:51 – Brian: I am an enemy of starting over type of thing. You have a lot of engineers who START projects, and they can say that they start this piece, but the experts and choice team members have what it takes to ship a feature. I mean fully ship it, not just 80%, but also the final 20%. I think it takes a lot of pose decision making to say I want to rewrite it but not right now. I still need to ship this code. I have always been a bigger fan as not rewriting as much as possible; however, if you started with good patterns then that’s true, but if you are starting off with bad patterns then maybe yes. I like that opinion b/c you have to start right.Brian: How do you do your CSS?19:05 – https://www.linkedin.com/in/amir-tugi/?originalSubdomain=il 19:52 – https://devchat.tv/get-a-coder-job/ 20:30 – Brian: How do you make those decisions, Amir?20:39 – Guest: I see something that I like and ask myself how do I apply this to my design and I start scaling things.21:50 – Host: Are you using a tool likehttps://www.sketchapp.com for your initial https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_interface_design 22:05 – Guest.22:54 – Host: I worked on a project where the client had a https://youtu.be/Ovj4hFxko7c 24:00 – Host and Guest go back-and-forth. 24:51 – Host: I am sure it’s all about the quality from your designer, too. Hopefully it works well for you and it’s quality.25:18 – Host: There is a lot to building an app from scratch. I am not a good designer. I am not a designer – I mean straight-up. I got nothing. I appreciate team members that can do that.26:06 – Guest: Do you write...?26:35 – Host: Only on the most recent project. The designer didn’t own the HTML CSS but he initially wrote it and then gave it to me and now I own it, and it’s in components. If he wants updates then I have to go and make changes b/c he doesn’t know Angular. If it’s a sketch or a PNG you have to make it look like that. That’s what most of my career has been.Host: HTML and CSS got me 762x easier once https://css-tricks.com/snippets/css/a-guide-to-flexbox/ came around! I know there is a decimal there!28:23 – Host talks about https://css-tricks.com/snippets/css/a-guide-to-flexbox/ some more. 28:42 – Guest asks a question. 28:50 – Host: I suppose if I really had heavy needs for a table then I would try CSS grid could solve some problems. I might just use a styled table.29:12 – Brian: https://www.ag-grid.com or something else.29:21 – Host: On this recent project...I’ve used in-house design and other things. If I ever needed a table it was there. I don’t rebuild components b/c that can get expensive for me.30:50 – Brian: Accessibility.31:00 – Host: Your upgrade just got 10x harder b/c you own the component loop. I really don’t build tables or drop-downs. Only way is if I really need to build it for a specific request.31:30 – Brian.31:58 – Host: Let me give you an example. You can think I am crazy, but a designer gave me a drop-down but he told me to use https://codeburst.io/why-not-primeng-852a9dfca6bc I had the chose of building my own drop-down or the designer has to accept whatever they gave him. I made the UI make what he wanted and I made the drop-down zero capacity and then...Host: When you click on what you see you are clicking on the...Host: Does that make sense?33:35 – Guest.33:50 – Host.34:25 – Brian: That is interesting; remember when...34:58 – Host: We will send this episode to Jeremy – come on Jeremy! Any last ideas? Let’s move onto picks!35:20 – https://www.freshbooks.com END – https://www.cachefly.com Links:
- https://vuejs.org
- https://jquery.com
- https://angular.io
- https://reactjs.org
- https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/
- https://youtu.be/Ovj4hFxko7c
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_interface_design
- https://css-tricks.com/snippets/css/a-guide-to-flexbox/
-

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/adventures-in-angular--6102018/support.

Jaksot(468)

Web Components for Cross Framework Development with Nishu Goel - AiA 431

Web Components for Cross Framework Development with Nishu Goel - AiA 431

Nishu Goel joins the Adventure to talk about how Web Components can be used in Angular applications and how to use them to share functionality across multiple applications written in different framewo...

14 Marras 202444min

Profiling Angular Apps with Gil Fink - AiA 430

Profiling Angular Apps with Gil Fink - AiA 430

The illustrious and well-regarded Gil Fink joins the Adventures in Angular panel to talk about profiling your Angular apps. Profiling consists of finding bottlenecks, and memory leaks among other prob...

24 Loka 202444min

Leveraging Event Sourcing: Enhancing Scalability and Consistency in Front-end and Back-end - AiA 429

Leveraging Event Sourcing: Enhancing Scalability and Consistency in Front-end and Back-end - AiA 429

In this episode, Lucas, Armen, and Subrat are joined by Luis Galeas, the CEO and founder of Ambar. Today's discussion dives into the fascinating world of event sourcing, exploring its intricacies in b...

17 Loka 202454min

Is There Benefits from Working From Home with Will Gant - AiA 428

Is There Benefits from Working From Home with Will Gant - AiA 428

In this episode of Adventures in Angular, Will Gant, author of Remote Work talks about working from home and working outside of the client's office. He and Brooks share their experience with working t...

10 Loka 20241h

Data Mocking with Dave Cooper - AiA 427

Data Mocking with Dave Cooper - AiA 427

In this episode of Adventures in Angular the panel interviews Dave Cooper, who recently gave a talk at AngularConnect about using Mock Data. Dave starts by explaining more about his talk and sharing t...

3 Loka 202442min

Managing Component State the Sane Way with Freddy Montes - AiA 426

Managing Component State the Sane Way with Freddy Montes - AiA 426

Freddy Montes joins the adventure to discuss how he and his team manage state in their Angular components.Many development teams instinctively reach for a solution like ngrx when they're building thei...

26 Syys 202444min

Cross Platform Angular with Richard Sithole - AiA 425

Cross Platform Angular with Richard Sithole - AiA 425

Have you ever thought how nice it'd be to write your apps for desktop and mobile alongside the web? Richard Sithole joins the adventure to discuss how to pull a desktop app and mobile app into your re...

12 Syys 20241h 1min

Micro Frontends and Zoneless Angular: Bridging Framework Interoperability - AiA 424

Micro Frontends and Zoneless Angular: Bridging Framework Interoperability - AiA 424

Dive deep into the latest trends and challenges in the development world. Lucas, Armen, and Subrat Mishra are joined by a special guest,  Rakia Ben Sassi, a Google Developer Expert in Angular. In this...

5 Syys 202451min

Suosittua kategoriassa Liike-elämä ja talous

sijotuskasti
psykopodiaa-podcast
mimmit-sijoittaa
rss-rahapodi
rss-lahtijat
rss-draivi
rss-porssipuhetta
rahapuhetta
oppimisen-psykologia
rss-rahamania
rss-seuraava-potilas
rss-neuvottelija-sami-miettinen
rss-bisnesta-bebeja
rss-paatos-podcast-suomen-kovimmat-paatoksentekijat-2
rss-paasipodi
rss-40-ajatusta-aanesta
taloudellinen-mielenrauha
syo-nuku-saasta
kasvun-kipuja
rss-viisas-raha-podi