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IF you don't want to use If statements, THEN what? We've got you. In this episode, Charles sits down with Yiu Pang (Leo) Chan, a software developer whose expertise in Angular has helped hospitals weather the COVID storm on their systems. They talk about Leo's go-to tips for building a robust dashboard, the biggest way Angular changed Leo's game, and Leo's #1 choice for building stacks in 2022. “OOP summarizes things very well and gives the user quick insight to see how it's performing. It's a brand new approach that's helped me brainstorm more creatively.” - Yiu Pang (Leo) Chan In This Episode Leo's go-to tips for building an intuitive and powerful dashboard How COVID forced Leo to think beyond if-statements and go beyond the norm The BIGGEST way that Angular and OOP changed Leo's game and simplified his workflow Leo's #1 choice for building stacks in 2022 Sponsors Top End Devs (https://topenddevs.com/) Coaching | Top End Devs (https://topenddevs.com/coaching) Links Get Rid of if-statements in your Angular App with OOP | by Yiu Pang (Leo) Chan | ITNEXT 2 (https://itnext.io/get-rid-of-if-statements-in-your-angular-app-with-oop-1efdf91da577) Picks Charles- Forbidden Desert | Board Game | BoardGameGeek (https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/136063/forbidden-desert) Charles- Call Charles at (801) 877-3287 Leo- Rich Dad Poor Dad (https://amzn.to/3qr4X8x) Leo- Micro Frontends in Action (https://www.manning.com/books/micro-frontends-in-action) Special Guest: Yiu Pang (Leo) Chan.
IF you don't want to use If statements, THEN what? We've got you. In this episode, Charles sits down with Yiu Pang (Leo) Chan, a software developer whose expertise in Angular has helped hospitals weather the COVID storm on their systems. They talk about Leo's go-to tips for building a robust dashboard, the biggest way Angular changed Leo's game, and Leo's #1 choice for building stacks in 2022. “OOP summarizes things very well and gives the user quick insight to see how it's performing. It's a brand new approach that's helped me brainstorm more creatively.” - Yiu Pang (Leo) Chan In This Episode Leo's go-to tips for building an intuitive and powerful dashboard How COVID forced Leo to think beyond if-statements and go beyond the norm The BIGGEST way that Angular and OOP changed Leo's game and simplified his workflow Leo's #1 choice for building stacks in 2022 Sponsors Top End Devs (https://topenddevs.com/) Coaching | Top End Devs (https://topenddevs.com/coaching) Links Get Rid of if-statements in your Angular App with OOP | by Yiu Pang (Leo) Chan | ITNEXT 2 (https://itnext.io/get-rid-of-if-statements-in-your-angular-app-with-oop-1efdf91da577) Picks Charles- Forbidden Desert | Board Game | BoardGameGeek (https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/136063/forbidden-desert) Charles- Call Charles at (801) 877-3287 Leo- Rich Dad Poor Dad (https://amzn.to/3qr4X8x) Leo- Micro Frontends in Action (https://www.manning.com/books/micro-frontends-in-action) Special Guest: Yiu Pang (Leo) Chan.
What's up everyone, this is Dariusz Kalbarczyk co-founder of NG Poland, JS Poland, AngularMaster.dev & WorkshopFest.dev. Welcome back to the Angular Master Podcast. Today we've got a special guest from Warsaw Poland, Senior Frontend Developer @ BigPicture. Ladies and gentlemen... Kamil Gałek Technical part: Can you tell us a few words about yourself, what do you do on a daily basis? Tell me more about BigPicture, what is it? Can you describe what is the biggest problem with huge apps? What is an incremental change approach? Are there any tools that can help with it? Are there any other challenges during work with that big app? Do you use the monorepo pattern? If you do, why? Why not micro frontends? What kind of performance issues do you have to solve in BigPicture? How often do you have to work with performance? Is it possible to do some kind of automatic process that helps you with incremental changes on performance issues? Non-technical part: What kind of person is Kamil? How do you see yourself? Do you have some hints for us regarding self-organization? Do you have any favorite hobbies? What's about your work/live balance? Do you have some hints for us? You will be a speaker at NG Poland 2021, what are you preparing for this year's edition? https://ng-poland.pl https://js-poland.pl https://angularmaster.dev https://workshopfest.dev --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/angular-master/message
Heute gibts' die allerletzte Folge vor der Babypause. Mal sehen, wie lange diese Pause so wird. Heute soll es eigentlich um etablierte Standards in der Software-Entwicklung gehen. Geht es auch irgendwie. Aber erstmal kostet der Bene genüsslich aus, dass der Holger seine antike Angular-App nicht mehr ans Laufen bekommt. Von da wird eine wahnsinnig elegante Brücke zu den beiden Aufhänger-Tweets geschlagen, die jeder für sich Best-Practices in Frage stellen. Es geht heiß her! Schließlich kommen wir wirklich selber noch dazu, solche Wahrheiten in den Raum zu werfen. Aber dann sind die @autoweirdschen 20 Minuten auch schon um.
Tomas Trajan joins us to go over approaches we can take when planning the architecture of our Angular applications. Tomas on Twitter https://twitter.com/tomastrajan Tomas personal website (angular universal + lazy loading) https://tomastrajan.com/home Blog ( many cool Angular articles) https://medium.com/@tomastrajan Lazy load Angular elements and other web-components in Angular https://angular-extensions.github.io/elements/#/home Angular Ngrx Material Starter (demo) https://tomastrajan.github.io/angular-ngrx-material-starter#/about --- Video of episode: https://youtu.be/oeT6r7Qd6OI --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/angularair/support
Panel: Joe Eames Shai Reznik Alyssa Nicoll Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Bryan Forbes In the episode of Adventures in Angular, the panel speaks with Bryan Forbes. Bryan has been working for Sight Pen a consultancy company that works with JavaScript and many others platforms. Bryan mentions that SitePen is well known for their Dojo toolkit. Bryan talks about testing Angular with the intern tool. Bryan and the panel dive into the testing of all sorts old and new tools and compared them to the Intern Toolkit. Bryan talks about the different kinds functions that are needed to compile and implement testing. The discussion covers tools like Testacular, karma, Protractor, and Leadfoot, and Intern, as testing kits for Angular. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: What intern a testing tool and how it is used. Protractor and how this is different as a testing tool Cross browser testing Testacular turning in to Karma Unit testing end to end. Using typescript Promise shim How to bring Intern into your Angular App Assertion libraries Intern working with Karma Intern is client-side product, not a SAAS product Protractor Webpak plugin to integrate Intern End-to-End testing Leadfoot testing and much more! Links: SitePen Bryan Forbes Leadfoot Testacular Karma Protractor Bryan’s blog @bryanforbes GitHub/Bryan Forbes Picks: Shai Angular Connect - EG Game Show Alyssa Destiny II Joe The Behavior Gap Charles Profit First MoviePass.com Bryan Using Intern With Angular Read!
Panel: Joe Eames Shai Reznik Alyssa Nicoll Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Bryan Forbes In the episode of Adventures in Angular, the panel speaks with Bryan Forbes. Bryan has been working for Sight Pen a consultancy company that works with JavaScript and many others platforms. Bryan mentions that SitePen is well known for their Dojo toolkit. Bryan talks about testing Angular with the intern tool. Bryan and the panel dive into the testing of all sorts old and new tools and compared them to the Intern Toolkit. Bryan talks about the different kinds functions that are needed to compile and implement testing. The discussion covers tools like Testacular, karma, Protractor, and Leadfoot, and Intern, as testing kits for Angular. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: What intern a testing tool and how it is used. Protractor and how this is different as a testing tool Cross browser testing Testacular turning in to Karma Unit testing end to end. Using typescript Promise shim How to bring Intern into your Angular App Assertion libraries Intern working with Karma Intern is client-side product, not a SAAS product Protractor Webpak plugin to integrate Intern End-to-End testing Leadfoot testing and much more! Links: SitePen Bryan Forbes Leadfoot Testacular Karma Protractor Bryan’s blog @bryanforbes GitHub/Bryan Forbes Picks: Shai Angular Connect - EG Game Show Alyssa Destiny II Joe The Behavior Gap Charles Profit First MoviePass.com Bryan Using Intern With Angular Read!
Panel: Joe Eames Shai Reznik Alyssa Nicoll Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Bryan Forbes In the episode of Adventures in Angular, the panel speaks with Bryan Forbes. Bryan has been working for Sight Pen a consultancy company that works with JavaScript and many others platforms. Bryan mentions that SitePen is well known for their Dojo toolkit. Bryan talks about testing Angular with the intern tool. Bryan and the panel dive into the testing of all sorts old and new tools and compared them to the Intern Toolkit. Bryan talks about the different kinds functions that are needed to compile and implement testing. The discussion covers tools like Testacular, karma, Protractor, and Leadfoot, and Intern, as testing kits for Angular. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: What intern a testing tool and how it is used. Protractor and how this is different as a testing tool Cross browser testing Testacular turning in to Karma Unit testing end to end. Using typescript Promise shim How to bring Intern into your Angular App Assertion libraries Intern working with Karma Intern is client-side product, not a SAAS product Protractor Webpak plugin to integrate Intern End-to-End testing Leadfoot testing and much more! Links: SitePen Bryan Forbes Leadfoot Testacular Karma Protractor Bryan’s blog @bryanforbes GitHub/Bryan Forbes Picks: Shai Angular Connect - EG Game Show Alyssa Destiny II Joe The Behavior Gap Charles Profit First MoviePass.com Bryan Using Intern With Angular Read!
MAS 018: Gil Fink This episode is a My Angular Story with Gil Fink. Listen to learn more about Gil and his story! [00:02:16] Introduction to Gil Gil is the CEO of Sparxys, a consulting company he created. wrote a book called the Pro Single Page Application Development. He was a co-organizer of Angular App, which is a conference in Israel, which was held just last month. [00:04:39] How did you get into programming? Gil first owned a computer at ten years old. It was an IBM compatible computer with an MS-DOS operating system. He used it to play games like Pac Man, which he would attempt to edit and claims was the first time he tried to program anything. Gil wanted to learn computer science in high school. In grades tenth through twelfth, he learned Turbo Pascal and Excel. During this time he wrote unprofessional programs. He went to college for computer science. His first job as a web developer was helping to write a government portal for the Israeli government. What ultimately led him to computer science is the curiosity to know how things that operate hardware work. “If you’re curious about something, go and learn it.” [00:12:12] How did you go from government to working with Angular? Gil describes his story to Angular as one of progression and “moving on with everybody else.” He worked with the government project from 2005-2007. He was then involved with a web app project using jQuery and Backbone. The VP while he was at the job asked why he was using backbone, so Gil researched Angular. It looked like it included everything he needed. After reading more on it, he began using it and created an Angular JS course for his employer. He learned it through creating that course. [00:15:35] What was it about Angular that made you decide you wanted to be doing it? Gil thinks the community is one of the best things about Angular. The team is approachable. Gil had issues with other libraries and did not get the same vibe from people. They were not as welcoming and eager to help as they are in the Angular community. There is a lot of collaboration. The tools and frameworks around Angular are developing and people help each other as they develop. [00:23:30] Contributions Gil has made several contributions to the Angular community. Most recently he has created the Angular 2-indexeddb service. It is a library that can be found GitHub. He has written directives in the past that people use and is amazed that people use things that he wrote. He wrote Story.js, another library that wrapped all storages in one browser, which he does recommend anyone use. He has published several online videos and was featured on an Angular Connect workshop recently. Gil is always willing to help mentor other developers. He has started writing blog posts in order to help junior freelancers. Currently he is involved with two start up accelerators. They are Google Launchpad Accelerator and University Accelerator. Both are where people come with ideas and they help make their ideas startups. Picks Gil: Goodness Squad Angular2-indexeddb Library Spider-Man Homecoming Charles: The Millionaire Mind The Freelancer Show Toastmasters club Angular Dev Summit Links Twitter http://gilfink.azurewebsites.net/ Medium Sparxys
MAS 018: Gil Fink This episode is a My Angular Story with Gil Fink. Listen to learn more about Gil and his story! [00:02:16] Introduction to Gil Gil is the CEO of Sparxys, a consulting company he created. wrote a book called the Pro Single Page Application Development. He was a co-organizer of Angular App, which is a conference in Israel, which was held just last month. [00:04:39] How did you get into programming? Gil first owned a computer at ten years old. It was an IBM compatible computer with an MS-DOS operating system. He used it to play games like Pac Man, which he would attempt to edit and claims was the first time he tried to program anything. Gil wanted to learn computer science in high school. In grades tenth through twelfth, he learned Turbo Pascal and Excel. During this time he wrote unprofessional programs. He went to college for computer science. His first job as a web developer was helping to write a government portal for the Israeli government. What ultimately led him to computer science is the curiosity to know how things that operate hardware work. “If you’re curious about something, go and learn it.” [00:12:12] How did you go from government to working with Angular? Gil describes his story to Angular as one of progression and “moving on with everybody else.” He worked with the government project from 2005-2007. He was then involved with a web app project using jQuery and Backbone. The VP while he was at the job asked why he was using backbone, so Gil researched Angular. It looked like it included everything he needed. After reading more on it, he began using it and created an Angular JS course for his employer. He learned it through creating that course. [00:15:35] What was it about Angular that made you decide you wanted to be doing it? Gil thinks the community is one of the best things about Angular. The team is approachable. Gil had issues with other libraries and did not get the same vibe from people. They were not as welcoming and eager to help as they are in the Angular community. There is a lot of collaboration. The tools and frameworks around Angular are developing and people help each other as they develop. [00:23:30] Contributions Gil has made several contributions to the Angular community. Most recently he has created the Angular 2-indexeddb service. It is a library that can be found GitHub. He has written directives in the past that people use and is amazed that people use things that he wrote. He wrote Story.js, another library that wrapped all storages in one browser, which he does recommend anyone use. He has published several online videos and was featured on an Angular Connect workshop recently. Gil is always willing to help mentor other developers. He has started writing blog posts in order to help junior freelancers. Currently he is involved with two start up accelerators. They are Google Launchpad Accelerator and University Accelerator. Both are where people come with ideas and they help make their ideas startups. Picks Gil: Goodness Squad Angular2-indexeddb Library Spider-Man Homecoming Charles: The Millionaire Mind The Freelancer Show Toastmasters club Angular Dev Summit Links Twitter http://gilfink.azurewebsites.net/ Medium Sparxys
MAS 018: Gil Fink This episode is a My Angular Story with Gil Fink. Listen to learn more about Gil and his story! [00:02:16] Introduction to Gil Gil is the CEO of Sparxys, a consulting company he created. wrote a book called the Pro Single Page Application Development. He was a co-organizer of Angular App, which is a conference in Israel, which was held just last month. [00:04:39] How did you get into programming? Gil first owned a computer at ten years old. It was an IBM compatible computer with an MS-DOS operating system. He used it to play games like Pac Man, which he would attempt to edit and claims was the first time he tried to program anything. Gil wanted to learn computer science in high school. In grades tenth through twelfth, he learned Turbo Pascal and Excel. During this time he wrote unprofessional programs. He went to college for computer science. His first job as a web developer was helping to write a government portal for the Israeli government. What ultimately led him to computer science is the curiosity to know how things that operate hardware work. “If you’re curious about something, go and learn it.” [00:12:12] How did you go from government to working with Angular? Gil describes his story to Angular as one of progression and “moving on with everybody else.” He worked with the government project from 2005-2007. He was then involved with a web app project using jQuery and Backbone. The VP while he was at the job asked why he was using backbone, so Gil researched Angular. It looked like it included everything he needed. After reading more on it, he began using it and created an Angular JS course for his employer. He learned it through creating that course. [00:15:35] What was it about Angular that made you decide you wanted to be doing it? Gil thinks the community is one of the best things about Angular. The team is approachable. Gil had issues with other libraries and did not get the same vibe from people. They were not as welcoming and eager to help as they are in the Angular community. There is a lot of collaboration. The tools and frameworks around Angular are developing and people help each other as they develop. [00:23:30] Contributions Gil has made several contributions to the Angular community. Most recently he has created the Angular 2-indexeddb service. It is a library that can be found GitHub. He has written directives in the past that people use and is amazed that people use things that he wrote. He wrote Story.js, another library that wrapped all storages in one browser, which he does recommend anyone use. He has published several online videos and was featured on an Angular Connect workshop recently. Gil is always willing to help mentor other developers. He has started writing blog posts in order to help junior freelancers. Currently he is involved with two start up accelerators. They are Google Launchpad Accelerator and University Accelerator. Both are where people come with ideas and they help make their ideas startups. Picks Gil: Goodness Squad Angular2-indexeddb Library Spider-Man Homecoming Charles: The Millionaire Mind The Freelancer Show Toastmasters club Angular Dev Summit Links Twitter http://gilfink.azurewebsites.net/ Medium Sparxys