RRU 031: "Real-time Editable Datagrid In React" with Peter Mbanugo
React Round Up2 Loka 2018

RRU 031: "Real-time Editable Datagrid In React" with Peter Mbanugo

Panel: Special Guests: Peter Mbanugo In this episode, the panel talks with guest speaker, Peter Mbanugo. Peter is a computer software specialist who works with Field Intelligence and writes technical articles for Progress Software and a few others. He studied at SMC University and currently resides in Nigeria. They talk about his creation, Hamoni Sync, and article, Real-time editable data grid in React. Also, other topics such as Offline-First, Speed Curve, Kendo UI are talked about, too. Check out today’s episode Show Topics: 1:30 – Chuck: Let’s talk about what you built and how it works. Topic: Real-time editable data grid in React. 1:40 – Peter: Real time editing. It allows you to edit and have the data go across the different devices. Synchronizing your applications. For the 2:47 – I saw that you built also the... 2:58 – Peter: Yes, I built that with Real-time. Most of the time I have to figure out how to build something to go across the channel, such as the message. Then I built the chats. Next month 4:33 – Justin: It says that it can go offline. That is challenging. How are you going about that? 4:51 – Peter answers the question. Peter: When you loose connections and when the network comes back on then it will try to publish anything to the server while offline. If you are trying to initialize the... 5:42 – Awesome. 5:45 – Peter continues his thoughts. 5:56 – Lucas: This is really interesting. Form something really simple to tackle this problem. I have gotten into so many problems. Congratulations on at least having the courage to try such a system. 6:35 – Justin: When you have someone interacting with one of these applications, lose connectivity, is the service handling this behind the scenes? 6:56 – Peter: Yes. Peter goes into detail. 7:19 – Justin: Neat. That would be interesting to dig more into that. 7:35 – Lucas: I had a friend who sent me links and I was like WHOAH. It’s not an easy task. 7:57 – Peter: Yes, offline – I am learning each and everyday. There are different ways to go about it. Then I go write something about conflict free of different types. I thought that was the way to go. I didn’t want it to be something of the declines. 8:50 – Lucas: How did React work for you? 9:24 – Peter answers the question. 9:58 – Panelist: I was trying to synchronize the system. There are 2 types: Operational Transformations and CRDTs. It’s a really hard problem. 10:35 – Lucas: Now we have multiple devices and they can be far away from each other. Updates to send to the same server. I think that this is really complicated world. Even consider new techniques that we use in RI. You have a long in process. You need to react to them. Maybe dates that you cannot get. Hard problem we are solving now. 11:56 –Justin: Even interacting with applications that ... it has made our products that aren’t approachable if someone doesn’t have a good Internet connection. Synchronizing connections while offline. So you can have offline support. These are problems that we can resolve hopefully. 13:01 – Lucas: It affects everyone. Back in Brazil we had problems with connections, because it’s connections. Now I live in NY but the subway my connection is hurt. 13:40 – Peter: Yes, I agree. Peter talks about his connections being an issue while living in Africa. 14:52 – Justin: How does that affect your development workflow? 15:08 – Peter answers the question. 17:23 – Justin: Shout-out to the Chrome team. Tool called LIGHTHOUSE. It can test for accessibility, SEOs and etc. Good same defaults and trying to test Mobile First. When I was learning about performance I wasn’t thinking about the types of devices that people would use. The edits tab really helps think about those things. 18:41 – Digital Ocean’s Advertisement 19:18 – Justin: Any tools to help test your download speeds or anything authentication tools? 19:36 – Peter answers this question. 20:15 – Panelist asks the same question to Lucas. 20:22 – Lucas: interesting question. Even though the website was doing pretty well we were in the dark. We did a huge migration and it wasn’t clear about the performance. So my first mission here was start using a tool called SPEED CURVE. It only gets better. For a company who needs to acquire a tool SPEED CURVE is great. They have the LIGHTHOUSE measurements in their dashboards. So it can follow through time your scores and all of your analysis. These are the tools we use today. They have both synthetic and real user monitoring. So when we are measuring things on our Chrome it is a picture of your machine (biased picture) they make it both synthetic and film your page and compare through time. Analyze your assets. Some code on your application and collects statistics for each user. Relic I have used before, too. I do believe those tools are of great help. I am sure there are opensource initiatives, but I haven’t played 22:56 – Peter: Have you tried...? 23:07 – Lucas continues. LIGHTHOUSE. 23:56 – Justin: It gives great visualizations for people to see. SPEED CURVE. Where we are at – so they can see that – it’s powerful. 24:40 – Lucas: Interesting story we used SPEED CURVE. Real users and synthetic measurements; our website was getting slower and slower. We couldn’t figure it out. What is happening to our application? It turned out that the app more people were using it on the mobile. The real user speed was going up because they were using mobile. The share of mobile users and performance was getting better. You look at the overall average it was getting slower. Interesting lesson on how to look at data, interpret data and insights. It was really interesting. 26:21 – Peter. 26:25 – Lucas continues the previous conversation from 24:40. 27:00 – Justin: Taking the conversation back. It’s always a challenging problem because the implications are hard to use. What was your experience with React Table? What are the pros and cons? 27:40 – Peter: React Table is quite light. It is pretty good on data. I haven’t had much of a problem. It is okay to use. The other ones I haven’t tried them, yet. 28:08 – Justin: Same question to Charles and to Lucas. 28:21 – Lucas: I have never worked with big tables to render the massive data or tables that need to be edits and stuff like that. I don’t have experience with those components. Play here and there. It is interesting, because it is one of those components that are fighting the platform and it’s a good source of interesting solutions. 29:05 – Chuck: Kendo UI has one. I need something that his more barebones. AG Grid. 30:03 – Justin: React Windows. It optimizes long lists. It just renders what is in the current window. 30:22 – Ryan Vaughn. 30:28 – Justin: Cool library. 30:36 – Lucas: Use it as a learning tool. How do you all decide when to actually start using a library? As early as you can? Libraries to solve our problems? 31:19 – Peter: It depends on what I am doing. 31:53 – Fascinating question. Not one size fits all. It’s a balance between product deliverable needs and... There can be risks involved. Fine balance. I find myself doing a lot is I will default using a library first. Library that isn’t too large but what I need for that project. If there is a hairy feature I will use the library until my needs are met. 33:49 – Lucas adds his comments. Lucas: You want to differentiate yourself. I love GitHub. 35:36 – Question to Charles: I know you have tons of stuff going on. What’s your thought process? 35:53 – Chuck: If I can find stuff on the shelf I will pay for it. My time adds up much more quickly then what the dollars do. I will pay for something off the shelf. I only mess around for a while but if I can’t find something to help me then I will go and build something of my own. I got close with Zapier, but I got to the point that I wanted to put something together that I built my own thing through Ruby on Rails. Generally I will pay for it. 37:07 – Panelist: Yes, I don’t think we all don’t value our time and how expensive time is. 37:25 – Chuck: I own the business. My time is of value – it’s more important to me. It’s a trap that people fall into not to value their time. 38:11 – Lucas: We are not all working on what we SHOULD be working on. This isn’t going to bring business Productive time that we are using with stuff that is not our business or our main focus. Focus on the core pro

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RRU 014: Razzle with Jared Palmer

RRU 014: Razzle with Jared Palmer

Panel: Nader Dabit Special Guests: Jared Palmer In this episode of React Round Up, the panel discusses Razzle and other projects with Jared Palmer. Jared is the lead engineer at The Palmer Group, where he spends his time building apps and services for companies that have been underserved by the recent technological changes. They talk about what Razzle is, the benefit of server-side rendering, and the difficulties he faced putting this project together. They also touch on why he chose to create Razzle and some of his other projects like Backpack and After.js. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Jared introHow he got into programmingFell into programming by accidentWhat is Razzle?Create React App with server-side renderingGatsbyGoal of RazzleWhat are the benefits of adding server-side rendering?The power of ReactNext.jsReact can hydrate once it renders on the serverRazzle is thin layer around 2 Webpack watch tasksHow do you handle routing?React RouterAfter.jsPerformance pros to server-side renderingIs an app built in Razzle still considered a single-page application?React ResolverWhat were the technical difficulties putting Razzle together?Why made you want to create this?Wanted direct control over the projectBackpackAnd much, much more! Links: The Palmer GroupRazzleCreate React AppGatsbyReactNext.jsWebpackReact RouterAfter.jsReact ResolverBackpackThe Palmer Group GitHubJared’s MediumJared’s GitHub@jaredpalmer Sponsors Kendo UIDigital OceanFreshBooks Picks: Nader Proton Native Jared Guess.jsGardenSpecial Guest: Jared Palmer. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/react-round-up--6102072/support.

5 Kesä 201848min

RRU 013: Visual Studio Code and the VS Code Azure Extension with Matt Hernandez and Amanda Silver LIVE at Microsoft Build

RRU 013: Visual Studio Code and the VS Code Azure Extension with Matt Hernandez and Amanda Silver LIVE at Microsoft Build

Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Matt Hernandez and Amanda Silver In this episode, the JavaScript Jabber panelists discuss Visual Studio Code and the VS Code Azure Extension with Matt Hernandez and Amanda Silver at Microsoft Build. Amanda is the director of program management at Microsoft working on Visual Studio and VS Code. Matt works on a mix between the Azure and the VS Code team, where he leads the effort to build the Azure extensions in VS code, trying to bring JavaScript developers to Azure through great experiences in VS Code. They talk about what’s new in VS Code, how the Azure extension works, what log points are, and much more! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Amanda introMatt introWhat’s new in VS Code?VS Code coreVS Live ShareShared TerminalNow have Linux supportLive Share is now public to the world for freeWhat would you use Shared Terminal for?Are there other things coming up in VS Code?Constantly responding to requests from the communityLive Share works for any languageHow does the Azure extension work?Azure App ServiceStorage extensionAzure Cosmos DBWhat are log points?All a part of a larger plan to create a better experience for JS developersVisual debuggersIs it the same plugin to support everything on Azure?Want to target specific services that node developers will take advantage ofAnd much, much more! Links: Visual StudioVS CodeAzureLive ShareAzure Cosmos DBMicrosoft BuildAzure App ServiceAmanda’s GitHub@amandaksilverMatt’s GitHub@fiveisprime  Picks: Charles Orphan BlackShout out to VS Code teamBattle of the Books  Matt The Customer-Driven Playbook by Travis LowdermilkThe Speed of Trust by Stephen M.R. CoveyYes, And by Kelly LeonardDigital Marketing For Dummies by Ryan DeissEd Gets His Power Back Kickstarter  Amanda Microsoft Quantum Development Kit for Visual Studio CodeIggy Peck, ArchitectTek by Patrick McDonnellSpecial Guests: Amanda Silver and Matt Hernandez. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/react-round-up--6102072/support.

29 Touko 201850min

RRU 012: The Future of Higher Order Components and Render Props with Paul Gray

RRU 012: The Future of Higher Order Components and Render Props with Paul Gray

Panel: Nader Dabit Special Guests: Paul Gray In this episode of React Round Up, the panel discusses the future of higher order components and render props with Paul Gray. Paul is a software developer at an educational technology company called Learning Objects. They have a learning platform there that helps instructional designers create better contents. They talk about how he got into programming and React, when you would want to use HOCs and render props, and chainable components. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Paul introReactHow long have you been working with React?How did you get into programming?TI-89 Calculators in high schoolSoftware engineering degree in collegeBig fan of HOCs when they came outChainable componentsChainable components APIPromisesAnatomy of render prop componentsTypeScriptasync/await GitHub GistUse casesTool to share reusable code in ReactHow long has this been in the works?With StateMappChain functionFunctional ProgrammingFunctional Programming in Scala by Paul ChiusanoAnd much, much more! Links: Learning ObjectsReactChainable componentsTypeScriptasync/await GitHub GistFunctional Programming in Scala by Paul ChiusanoPaul’s GitHubPaulGray.net Picks: Nader Viro ReactExpo blog Paul The Great Interior Design ChallengeLittle Tikes Red CarSpecial Guest: Paul Gray. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/react-round-up--6102072/support.

22 Touko 201836min

RRU 011: Simple React Patterns with Lucas Reis

RRU 011: Simple React Patterns with Lucas Reis

Panel: Charles Max WoodCory House Special Guests: Lucas Reis In this episode of React Round Up, the panel discusses simple React patterns with Lucas Reis. Lucas works as a senior front-end developer at Zocdoc and previously worked in Brazil for an ecommerce company called B2W. He recently wrote a blog post about simple React patterns that really took off and became popular on the web. They talk about this blog post, what defines a successful pattern, and then they discuss the different patterns that he has discovered in his years of React programming. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Lucas introTries to write blog posts as much as possibleSimple React Patterns blog postReactWhat does he mean by “successful” patterns?Three things that define good patternsDefine successful?The mix componentThe Container/Branch/View patternFirst successful pattern he has foundSeparation of concernsCommon concern: are we worried about mixing concerns?If/elseCan you encapsulate in the view?Pattern matchingReact loadableYou need to think of 3 states at leastHigher-order componentRender propsAnd much, much more! Links: ZocdocB2WSimple React Patterns blog postReactSimple Made Easy by Rich HickeyLucas’s GitHubLucas’s Blog@iamlucasreis Picks: Charles FullContactUdemy Cory Fluent confImmer Lucas PercyBe studying the languages and be inspired!Special Guest: Lucas Reis. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/react-round-up--6102072/support.

16 Touko 20181h 1min

RRU 010: Best Practices with React and Redux with Samuel Mendenhall

RRU 010: Best Practices with React and Redux with Samuel Mendenhall

Panel: Cory HouseNader Dabit Special Guests: Samuel Mendenhall In this episode of React Round Up, the panel discusses best practices with React and Redux with Samuel Mendenhall. Samuel has been working in web development for the past five years and was recently working for Red Hat. They talk about what has led him to React, as well as some of the most common mistakes that people make in React. They also talk about the amazing power of TypeScript and when you may not want to use Redux. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Sam introjQuery, Backbone, and AngularReact and React NativeNew role at Microsoft in commercial software engineering groupWorking a lot with React and toolingWhat have you learned since working with React?Shallow learning curveThe concept of React is very simpleWhat work did you do at Red Hat?Internal toolingWhat are some common mistakes people have made in React?Defensive programmingMaking sure functions are bound correctlyHe’s an advocate for using TypeScriptThe pros of using TypeScriptConnect in ReactConnect will do shallow comparisonsReduxWhen you shouldn’t use ReduxWhen should Redux be used in a project?MobXAnd much, much more! Links: jQueryBackboneAngularReactRed HatReact NativeTypeScriptReduxMobX@engineersamwellSam’s GitHub Picks: Cory Transform.now.shPlop js Nader React Amsterdam YouTubeAWS AppSyncAWS Amplify Sam WebpackSpecial Guest: Samuel Mendenhall. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/react-round-up--6102072/support.

8 Touko 201851min

RRU 009: Hot Reloading in Create React App with Dave Ceddia

RRU 009: Hot Reloading in Create React App with Dave Ceddia

Panel: Charles Max WoodTara Manicsic Special Guests: Dave Ceddia In this episode of React Round Up, the panel discusses hot reloading with Create React App with Dave Ceddia. Dave is a React developer, blogs about React, and recently wrote a book called Pure React. They talk about what hot reloading is, when you would want to use it, and how you can set it up in your code. They also touch on ways to customize Create React App, the disadvantages to customizing, and the key points to understand about Create React App before modifying it.  In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Dave introWhat is the big picture behind hot module reloading?Create React AppWebpackHow do you set this up?You don’t need to ejectIs there a certain point when you need to start taking advantage of hot reloading?Helps to use hot reloading from the beginningResources to help with using hot reloadingDave articleReact app rewiredAre there any changes you can make that won’t hot reload?Full page refreshesWhy did Create React App not have this from the beginning?Having a skeleton that you can breakWebpack HMR vs React-Hot-Loader by Mark Erikson Event handlersAre there other ways you can customize Create React App?SassKey points to Create React App to understandTry to avoid modifying it if you canAnd much, much more! Links: ReactDave’s BlogPure React by Dave CeddiaCreate React AppWebpackDave articleReact app rewiredWebpack HMR vs React-Hot-Loader by Mark EriksonSass@dceddiaDave’s GitHubDevChat.tv PatreonDaveCeddia.com/RoundUp Picks: Charles Star RealmsVailIf you have an idea about a podcast, he is willing to hear them outJavaScript YouTube videos to come at DevChat.tv YouTube Tara Patreon Dave React BostonIndie HackersSpecial Guest: Dave Ceddia. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/react-round-up--6102072/support.

1 Touko 20187min

RRU 008: The Framework Summit with Joe Eames

RRU 008: The Framework Summit with Joe Eames

Panel: Tara ManicsicNader Dabit Special Guests: Joe Eames In this episode of React Round Up, the panel discusses The Framework Summit with Joe Eames. Joe discusses the history behind the conference and how it came to be created. They really wanted to create a conference that would include all of the frameworks, especially those that are underrepresented in the programming community, like React. He touches on why he is passionate about this project, why it is important to be open to learning new things, and the overall format of the conference. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: The Framework SummitOctober 2-3, 2018 in Park City, UtahThe history of the conferenceReact Originally called the “Tri-conference”Frameworks play a major part in your code development“Religiousness” of which framework is the “right” or “wrong” one to useOpportunity to expose more people to new frameworksComparing the frameworksThe importance of being willing to learn new thingsBursting “thought bubbles”Being open to changeMerging communities and creating open dialogueFormat of the conferenceBoth single-track and multi-trackElmVueAngularGreat lineup already and it’s getting betterWebflowNovel and unique talksWhat not to do when submitting talksAnd much, much more! Links: ReactThe Framework SummitElmVueAngularWebflow@FrameworkSummit Picks: Tara Vue VixensngGirls Nader ViroReact Joe The 2018 Web Developer Roadmap by Brandon MorelliRole playing games - My Little PonySpecial Guest: Joe Eames. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/react-round-up--6102072/support.

24 Huhti 20181h 1min

RRU 007: Breaking up with Higher Order Components with David Atchley

RRU 007: Breaking up with Higher Order Components with David Atchley

Panel: Charles Max WoodNader DabitCory HouseKent C Dodds Special Guests: David Atchley In this episode of React Round Up, the panel discuss breaking up with higher-order components with David Atchley. David has been doing software development for 24 years now and has worked mostly in web development. He has worked at many places from start-ups to large companies and does client work currently for Tandem.ly. They talk about what higher-order components and render props are and when you would want to use them to help you in your code. They also touch on overuse and misuse of applications and coding tools and the difference between using render props and HOCs. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: David introWhat are higher-order components?What are render props?Higher-order components are patterned after higher-order functionsConnect from React ReduxReactWhat are the use cases for higher-order components?ReduxWould you suggest writing a render prop instead in certain situations?Deciding to use a HOC or a render prop depends on the situationThink critically about the applications you are usingKent’s Advanced React Component Patterns Egghead CourseDifference between render props and HOCsBuild an HOC out of a render prop if you want to share codeContext API from ReactConcern with new Context APIProblem with overuseHow do you help people avoid overuse and misuse?Unstated library by James KyleStart developing code at the local levelReact NativeAnd much, much more! Links: Tandem.lyReactReduxKent’s Egghead CourseContext API from ReactUnstated library by James KyleReact NativeDavid’s GitHub@Tuxz0rTandem.ly Medium Picks: Charles I’d Pay You $500,000 a Year, but You Can’t Do the Work by Shelly PalmerLiars by Glenn Beck Cory CodeSandbox LiveBabel replReact Cheat SheetFluent Conf Nader Shoe Dog by Phil KnightNader’s Blog Post Kent Answers to common questions about render props blog postReact’s new Context API blog postReact ComposerBrandon SandersonCodeSandbox Live David React, Inline Functions, and Performance by Ryan FlorenceBuild Better Products by Laura KleinSpecial Guest: David Atchley. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/react-round-up--6102072/support.

17 Huhti 201812min

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