RRU 085: Building Resilient Architecture with Monica Lent
React Round Up29 Okt 2019

RRU 085: Building Resilient Architecture with Monica Lent

Monica Lent has been interested in software from a very young age, and made her first domain name when she was 9 years old. She studied legacy languages Latin and Ancient Greek in university, but ended up keeping her college development job and going into software. She recently left her job and founded a startup, analytic tool designed for bloggers designed around affiliate marketing. She talks about some of the lessons she’s learned, including how to sift through data and how to make it useful for people. Monica gave a talk at React Finland and she first applies some of her principles from that talk to what she’s learned founding a startup. One of the main differences she’s found is a small startup has different needs and levels of stability than a business. In early stage business, you have to decide where you want to invest in quality and where you shouldn’t be investing. For example, her primary focus is on her algorithm that runs the tool, and UI is less of a priority. In a large company, this might be structured differently. The panel discusses how to distill the priorities from the project manager so you know where to spend your time, something that takes a lot of experience and failure. They agree that if something is business critical and will cause the business to lose money if it fails, those things should be a top priority. Second, the panel discusses the merits of different practices such as whether or not to deploy on Friday and having engineers on call. In Monica’s React Finland talk, she talks about the importance of constraints, which can help with these kinds of decisions. She explains that instead of thinking of architecture as something super abstract, think of it as enabling constraints, as picking ways to do less and end up with code that is safer to run, longer lasting, and has fewer bugs. Thomas shares how he used to oppose constraints and architecture, and how he changed his mind. They discuss the importance of automation over documentation for building sustainable code. Third, Monica explains her opinion on how copying and pasting code instead of adding dependencies is a positive constraint. She prefers this method most of the time but not in all cases because it keeps your code flexible and avoids unnecessary specialization. However she is not advocating for copy/paste over dependencies in every situation : rather the point comes down to using copy/paste instead of inappropriate coupling. Sometimes, when you create an abstraction and combine two pieces of code, this new combination makes code more brittle than it would be otherwise Components put in the shared folder almost never leave. This causes the component to become very specialized and not work in all scenarios. The panel discusses where this method may not work. Thomas talks about some of his favorite tools for simplifying complexity, React Hooks and Relay. Monica and the panelists discuss the merits of using TypeScript and proper methods for coupling code. Fourth, the panel discusses how so much of programming is dealing with other people and the importance of keeping your ego out of it when designing constraints, especially since developers hate other developer’s abstractions. They debate whether pride is a characteristic of junior or senior developers. They note that it is easier to get prideful and opinionated when you’re not working on a team. Thomas believes that if you aren’t working on a big team, you should force yourself to talk to people with opposing positions. The show concludes with the panelists agreeing that it all comes down to the balance between priorities and making things work. Sometimes we can get so focused on making something work that we lose sight of what actually matters. They agree that collaboration generally yields better results than leaving it to one person. Monica talks about the importance of senior developers nurturing their team by leading from behind to help people come up with their own solutions. The panelists talk about different methods they’ve seen for doing this. Panelists
  • Leslie Cohn-Wein
  • Thomas Aylott
  • Lucas Reis
With special guest: Monica Lent Sponsors Links Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Leslie Cohn-Wein: Thomas Aylott: Lucas Reis: Monica Lent: Special Guest: Monica Lent.

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Using and Teaching React with Kay Plößer - RRU 235

Using and Teaching React with Kay Plößer - RRU 235

In this episode of React Round Up, the panel talks with Kay Plößer, describing their experiences learning React. Kay is a software developer from Stuttgart, Germany and the author of the book React from Zero. They discuss the best approach to learning React from scratch. Kay describes the process of writing and producing his book 'React from Zero'. Initially he started with tutorials and lessons and then turned those into a book. It is constructed in two sections: basic and advanced and it's purpose is to help developers learn React without being overwhelmed. He has received great feedback from the people who have bought the book.Kay then describes his experiences teaching React to developers and talks about his blog post React Hooks Demystified which became really popular. The panel then about how developers can increase and diversify income through writing books and side projects.SponsorsChuck's Resume TemplateDeveloper Book Club Become a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs MembershipLinksKay's Book: React from ZeroKay's Blog Post: React Hooks DemystifiedKay’s LinkedInKay’s TwitterKay’s GitHubKay's WebsiteKay's SkillshareKay's Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/React-Round-Uphttps://twitter.com/reactroundupPicksNader - Finite and Infinite Games by James CarseLucas - An Introduction and Guide to the CSS Object ModelLucas - AST ExplorerCharles - Charles' New Devchat.tv Build on Eleventy on GitHubKay - Wardley mapsAdvertising 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.

10 Okt 202352min

The State Machines in React with David Khourshid - RRU 234

The State Machines in React with David Khourshid - RRU 234

David Khourshid is the author of a library called Xstate, He has been a developer for 7 years, currently works for Microsoft, his passion is frontendTalks a. In college, he actually studied piano performance, and so he talks about how he got into programming and where he started. The panel discusses his unique husky animation and how he came up with the idea for it and went about programming it.The panel discusses what a state is in React. David defines a state as a moment in time. States can change, when they do, that’s a state transition. They talk about the utility of states and thinking about your app as a state machine. They agree that describing your code as a state machine makes it easier to communicate and connect with non developers. The panel discusses the importance of learning from other industries, such as approaching programming the same way construction workers build a house. They debate the Waterfall versus the Agile mindset. They talk about the advantages of programming in React and focusing on the state machine, especially because it is important to be intentional about dealing with concepts separate from other concepts. They share different ways to switch to state machine thinking, one of which is to look at your event handlers and make sure they are doing anything besides dispatching events. David talks about his library called Xstate and the basics of his library and his inspiration, and who else is working in state machines. The finish by discussing industry standards. SponsorsChuck's Resume Template Raygun - Application Monitoring For Web & Mobile AppsBecome a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs MembershipLinksXstateKeyframersBootstrapDavid’s husky animationThe Checklist ManifestoSion SCXMLQTElmThunkObservableNoFloSketch SystemsState Charts PicksDavid - Atomic Habits by James Clear David - Bullet JournalThomas - The Checklist ManifestoThomas - Thomas’ Youtube ChannelDavid Khourshid - Constructing The User Interface with State Charts (check the library first)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.

4 Okt 202351min

React Best Practices - RRU 233

React Best Practices - RRU 233

In this week’s episode of React Round Up the panel works their way through a blog post outlining best practices for React. The first is “keeping components small and function-specific”. The panel discusses the pros of using this best practice and how it relates to the single responsibility principle. This best practice also helps with the next, “reusability is important”.The panel considers this second best practice and points out some of its flaws. It recommends avoiding the creation of new components. The panel explains that by avoiding creating new components it saves time but can also cause problems as you adapt components to fit more projects. SponsorsChuck's Resume TemplateDeveloper Book Club Become a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs MembershipLinkshttps://teachablemachine.withgoogle.com/ Practical React Hooks: How to refactor your app to use Hooks 12 React Best Practices You Need to Follow in 2020 https://github.com/nadeesha/saul https://www.facebook.com/React-Round-Uphttps://twitter.com/reactroundupPicksCharles - White Christmas Charles - Holiday Inn Charles - The MaxCoders Guide To Finding Your Dream Developer Job Christopher - https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-eslint Christopher - https://www.playingwithfire.co/ Thomas - test && commit || revertAdvertising 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.

27 Sep 202340min

Game Development in React & Typescript with Maksim Ivanov - RRU 232

Game Development in React & Typescript with Maksim Ivanov - RRU 232

Front-end developer Maksim Ivanov talks about working for Mojang, the company behind the ridiculously popular game Minecraft. As it turns out, Maksim uses React to build different pieces of the game, and runs the code through a custom renderer to make it work in the game world. In addition to his day job, he also found time to write a book about TypeScript after realizing how much easier getting familiar with new code bases could be if TypeScript was used instead of JavaScript. The panel has used TypeScript to varying degrees themselves, but nobody's gone all in, and they talk about the pros and cons of it, including the initial learning curve and how it can help prevent bugs in the code. Maksim's book covers many aspects of TypeScript in great detail, and it sounds like a good read for anyone just picking up the language.SponsorsChuck's Resume Template Raygun - Application Monitoring For Web & Mobile AppsBecome a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs MembershipLinksCustom Rendererreact-game-engine - npmreact-unity-webgl - npmgettextnewline@tjfuller • InstagramReact Hook FormCheatsheets for experienced React developers getting started with TypeScriptThe RSpec BookTypeStrongPicksMaksim - Follow Maksim on YoutubeMaksim -Harry Potter and the Methods of RationalityCharles - Iron druid chroniclesCharles - Percy JacksonPaige - The Name of the WindTJ - OmniDiskSweeper, OmniWeb, and OmniPresence - The Omni GroupTJ - https://rtmccormick.com/2018/01/10/clear-node-modules-folders-recursively-mac-linux/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.

20 Sep 202359min

All Astro with Fred Schott - RRU 231

All Astro with Fred Schott - RRU 231

Today we talk with Fred Schott, the co-creator of Astro, a web framework focused on improving performance. Built around island architecture, it leverages HTML over javascript where it’s an option. Astro is a great option for those who focus on content, marketing, or personal blogs, and it is a great option to use with React. In this episode, we talk about when it makes sense to use Astro, and how to implement it.SponsorsChuck's Resume TemplateDeveloper Book Club Become a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs MembershipLinksastro.new Astro | Build faster websitesAstro LoungeTwitter: @FredKSchottTwitter: @astrodotbuildPicksFred- Over the Garden WallJack- Pizza: The Ultimate Cookbook Featuring More Than 300 Recipes (Italian Cooking, Neapolitan Pizzas, Gifts for Foodies, Cookbook, History of Pizza)TJ- The Vergecast PodcastAdvertising 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.

13 Sep 202346min

React Architecture with Tommy Groshong - RRU 230

React Architecture with Tommy Groshong - RRU 230

In today's episode, we talk about state management, dependency injection, react hooks, API access best practices and more with Tommy Groshong a React UI architect.SponsorsChuck's Resume Template Raygun - Application Monitoring For Web & Mobile AppsBecome a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs MembershipLinksReact Context for Dependency Injection Not State ManagementReduce State Management Footprint with React QueryReduce State Management Footprint with React QueryTest DoubleTommyGroshong.comLinkedIn: Thomas Groshong Twitter: Tommy Groshong ( @tgroshon ) PicksJack- Deno DeployPaige- Ted LassoPaige- GitHub | foambubble/foamTJ- Land of the GiantsTommy- The CourierTommy- The Anarchist HandbookAdvertising 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.

6 Sep 202353min

Data Visualization at Scale with Andrey Goncharov - RRU 229

Data Visualization at Scale with Andrey Goncharov - RRU 229

Software Engineer Andrey Goncharov joins the React Round Up crew to discuss how his company Hazelcast has approached visualizing hundreds of data points on potentially hundreds of computers in a way that makes sense to users. Dust off your math skills - it gets a little technical along the way as they discuss graphs, charts, performance optimizations, and bottlenecks, and even handling accessibility of these data-intensive graphs. If you ever have to debug system failures and anomalies, this will be a worthwhile episode to check out.SponsorsChuck's Resume TemplateRaygun - Application Monitoring For Web & Mobile AppsBecome a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs MembershipLinksHazelcast | The Leading In-Memory Computing Platform Chart.js | Open Source HTML5 Charts for your WebsitePicksAndrey- Designing Data-Intensive Applications by Martin KleppmannPaige-  Netflix Series | The Queen’s GambitTJ- City of Stairs: A Novel (The Divine Cities) by Robert Jackson BennettSpecial Guest: Andrey Goncharov.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.

23 Aug 202343min

How to Organize Your React App ft. Tania Rascia - RRU 228

How to Organize Your React App ft. Tania Rascia - RRU 228

Tania Rascia joins the round up to discuss how to organize your code across files, directories, components, and repos within your React app. The panel chimes in with what they've seen and clarify how these approaches effect the overall application functionality of your app.SponsorsChuck's Resume TemplateDeveloper Book Club Become a Top 1% Dev with a Top End Devs MembershipLinksReact Architecture: How to Structure and Organize a React Application | Tania RasciaBackends for Frontends pattern - Cloud Design Patterns | Microsoft DocsChakra UIFront End Tables: Sorting, Filtering, and Pagination | Tania RasciaPicksJack- react-location - npmPaige - Newline.coPaige- Fullstack React with Typescript courseTania - NetlifyTJ - Edge ImpulseAdvertising 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 Aug 202345min

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