Angle measuring instrument
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These simple geometry skills will become valuable tools in your professional woodworking shop allowing you to work faster, with grater accuracy, and simplify many layout problems.Recommendations3-d Shapes https://www.learner.org/Protractor:https://www.amazon.com/General-Tools-Square-Metal-Protractor/dp/B00004T7TB?th=1Essential Craftsman- laying out a BIG arc: https://youtu.be/zIFILyE3qyMChad Staton How to become a BETTER Woodworker.....with geometry: https://youtu.be/IAGf2aEtPEA and https://youtu.be/HyC_LCe5eVUFormula to find radius of an arc when height and cord are known:r=h/2+(w^2/8h) r= radius h=height of the arc w= width (chord) Special Thanks to Listeners InWasilla, Alaska, USAArdee, County Louth, Irelandand one listener on the Island of CyprusSupport The Show On: Buy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/workatwoodwork Donate Directly: https://www.workingatwoodworking.com/support.phpYoutube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@workingatwoodworkingAffiliate Links:Taylor Tools: https://lddy.no/19h9vUnitel Voice VOIP- https://unitelvoice.grsm.io/2nio74g7myc5Coaching: https://www.workingatwoodworking.com/coaching.phpSound effects from: http://www.freesfx.co.ukWorking At Woodworking Podcast hopes to encourage and provide information to amateur woodworkers who dream about turning their hobby into a full-time or part-time business, and to help current business owners succeed. Business coaching is available at very reasonable rates. Contact:For more information or to support WAW, visit the website at https://www.workingatwoodworking.comSupport the show
Protractor has been a staple of Angular E2E testing since the beginning, but news of its deprecation saw it being removed from the Angular library in Version 15. With so many Angular applications still using Protractor for E2E tests, Endbridge is a tool that developers might reach for to bridge the gap between the legacy Protractor tools and more modern tools like Cypress. Joe Eames joins us in this episode to talk about how we can decide when tests are worth changing, when they should be left alone, and when a tool like Endbridge might be appropriate.Find out more at endbridge.dev and www.legionbuilds.com/dice Find us and our guests on twitter:Joe Eames @josepheamesThe Angular Plus Show (@AngularShow)The Angular Plus Show is a part of ng-conf. ng-conf is a multi-day Angular conference focused on delivering the highest quality training in the Angular JavaScript framework. Developers from across the globe converge on Salt Lake City, UT every year to attend talks and workshops by the Angular team and community experts.Follow us on twitter @ngconfOfficial Website: https://www.ng-conf.org/
We talk Arsenal and the Premier League title race against Man City with pod favourite Adam Pritchard (@threefivewho on twitter) Also Everton, Juventus, Shakira, and how Fulham fans dish out the vicky sponge at the Cottage... PLEASE SUPPORT US ON PATREON!! patreon.com/milesoffsidepod Follow us on Twitter: @milesoffsidepod https://twitter.com/milesoffsidepod?s=09 Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/milesoffsidepod/ Review us on iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/miles-offside/id1397029545?mt=2
Protractor was created in 2013 when AngularJS was the most popular web framework. Back then Protractor was the most visible option for writing E2E automation tests for AngularJS Applications. The ecosystem around JavaScript technologies has been changing continuously, with new tools emerging that afford automation testers with more modern options for writing tests. In this podcast, we'll give you reasons and ways to migrate from Protractor to Cypress since it's one of the best alternatives for E2E testing. Host: Chamal Perera, Senior QA Lead, 99x Speakers: Dilusha Rasangi Kumarage, Senior Lead - Software Quality Engineering, 99x Roshika Gunarathne, Associate Quality Assurance Lead, 99x
How to properly measure your thang-thang. Subscribe to the LonelyMans Patreon for exclusive bonus episodes every Friday: http://www.patreon.com/lonelymans MERCH: https://teespring.com/lonelymans Video available at https://www.youtube.com/lonelymanspodcast Follow us on Instagram LonelyMans - @lonelymanspodcast Jesse Burlingame - @jesse.burlingame Ben Bo - @benbosunga Holly Johnston - @holly.johnston_
Pissed off about Dashaun Watson? Ukraine? Climate Change? Quit Yer Bitchin and do something about it. Anything. Dave's greatest teaching moment. We talk about protractors. Yes. We. Do. Support TSBS at www.StuartBedasso.com.
This Week's New Moon in Scorpio is Powerful cutting away our old stories and beliefs and opening up to the new vision and new life that is already beginning! Here are you horoscopes for your individual sun and rising sign for this week with how the new moon will effect you. Let's do this! Jude Hotep coaches women on financial healing through the Divine Feminine. The Light Goddess Coaching Program activates the Goddess within through reconnection to your wild feminine intuition and certainty. Restoring your trust in the process of life through your sacred feminine truth and authentic voice. We clear creative channels to abundance, dismantle the suppressed light of the divine feminine, and reclaim empowerment. For The Free Guide: How To Connect To Your Sacred Feminine and Make More Money go to https://bit.ly/ConnectSacredFeminine Schedule A Sacred Call at: https://LightGoddessConsult.as.me/For more info and inspiration: http://lifecoachjude.com
You have a lot of expensive "stuff" in your shop - but is that the most valuable part of your business operation? Your investment goes way beyond the hard assets like tools, equipment, your customers' vehicles and your building. Without an effective use of your time your business will only go so far."The biggest investment successful shop owners make is in time," says Vic Tarasik, Shop Owner Coach. "One thing we often forget about time is that it is the most perishable thing we have." Guests on this episode are Brian Bates, Eagle Automotive, Littleton, CO; and Scott Thorley, president of ProtractorIn this podcast series, guests discuss some of the nightmares shop owners face with leading shop owners from across the country. Shop Owner Solutions is intended to help you avoid the 3 am panic – together, hosts Vic Tarasik and Doug Kaufman will explore the things that cause you the most stress, put your anxiety into high gear and keep you from feeling like you're achieving the success you deserve. This podcast episode is presented by Protractor.
Czym na co dzień zajmuje się Technical Writer? A może lepiej zapytać czym się nie zajmuje? Patrycja Pyrek studiuje informatykę i ekonometrię, uczy języka japońskiego i jednocześnie jako stażystka zdobywa techwriterskie doświadczenie. Ta różnorodność zainteresowań przejawia się również podczas jej stażu. Patrycja, poza tworzeniem dokumentacji, ma jeszcze szereg innych zadań, które pozwalają jej się rozwijać w obszarach testowania, lokalizacji i projektowania. Zresztą posłuchajcie sami! Muzyka w intro oraz dźwięki pochodzą z kolekcji "107 Free Retro Game Sounds" dostępnej na stronie https://dominik-braun.net, udostępnianej na podstawie licencji Creative Commons license CC BY 4.0. Informacje dodatkowe: Selenium WebDriver: https://www.selenium.dev/documentation/webdriver/ Protractor: https://www.protractortest.org/ AngularJS: https://angularjs.org/ OpenAPI: https://www.openapis.org/
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For the 21st episode of Season 3, we have a lot of stuff to talk about, 1 hour 41 minutes and 37 seconds to be exact (holy long, again). There were a few other special segments we had but you'll have to listen to hear for yourself. As always, we run through our usual segments that our listeners know and love. Give us a follow on Twitter & IG @_BasementBanter. Also, remember to rate us on your favorite Podcast App. THIS PODCAST IS NSFW - VIEWER DISCRETION IS ADVISED
This episode is primed for summertime shenanigans! We discuss the 'Cobra Effect, guess the difference between real and fake headlines, share what we resent paying for, and tackle what band may have the worst fan base. This week's canned inspiration comes in the form of a Belgian Style Pineapple Ale and a Gin Boogie whose content on the outside of the can, just may rival the content within. We want your recommendations! What is your favorite canned beverage? We‘d love to have a taste and feature it on a future episode. Any additional suggestions, questions, or corrections you may have, we want to hear those as well! Make it personal! Send us a voice message: speakpipe.com/CannedConversation Or, hang-out with us on the inter-webs in all the usual places: Instagram / Facebook: @cannedconvo Twitter: @canned_convo Reddit: u/Canned_Conversation YouTube: Canned Conversation Email: cannedconvo@gmail.com Checkout the Complete List of Cans Featured on the Show: Canned Convo Beverages.pdf The Rating System: We rate each can and its contents on a scale of 0 to 5 stars. No half stars, we commit and stand by the full level we award. 5-Star: We love it so much, we rave about it to anyone who will listen, and actively hand them out to friends and family to try! 4-Star: We really like it, will proactively get more, and will keep some on hand to enjoy at our next social gathering. 3-Star: It's good, we like it, and equate it to our standard weekend selection. We won't go out of our way to acquire more, but will certainly have it again should the situation arise. 2-Star: It's not great. We will finish this can, but will part ways after, and will likely not meet again in the future. 1-Star: It's terrible. We won't be finishing the can, and will need another, better can, to wash the awful taste out of our mouths. 0-Star: It's so bad, it caused a visceral reaction that made us physically reject it's contents.
Do you remember using a protractor for Geometry class?
Geekey is an innovative, compact multi-tool that expertly combines your go-to tools into one simple device you can carry with you anywhere. It's fully equipped with more than 16+ functions to help you tackle those common, everyday problems, including an innovative metric and imperial sized closed wrench and bit driver for quick fixes, TSA-compliant serrated edge and handy scoring tip, a bike spoke wrench for those off the grid rides, and even a bottle opener. Web: https://www.getgeekey.com Follow: @getgeekey About: The smart design of the Geekey Multi-tool is lightweight and compact enough to fit right on your keyring, and crafted from incredibly durable 420 stainless steel that's designed to last through a lifetime of adventures. Created for bikers, outdoor adventurers, handymen, and everyone else looking to always be prepared at a moments notice, Geekey is truly a work of art and engineering that delivers endless capability. Geekey features include a Smoking Pipe, 3.2/3.3mm Bike Spoke Key, a Screw Driver tip that will fit a #2/3 Slotted, #2 Square Drive, #2/3 Phillips, and #2/3 Combinations (Phillips/Slotted or Phillips/Square) screw all in one bit, Imperial and Metric Closed Wrench, ¼ inch Open Wrench, ¼ inch Bit Driver, Scoring Tip, Serrated Edge, Can Opener, Wire Stripper, File, Imperial and Metric Ruler, Protractor, Bottle Opener, Multi-head fit Driver, and Lanyard Hole. About the show: ► Website: http://www.ashsaidit.com ► Got Goli Gummies? https://go.goli.com/1loveash5 ► For $5 in ride credit, download the Lyft app using my referral link: https://www.lyft.com/ici/ASH584216 ► For discount Pangea Products: https://embracepangaea.grsm.io/ashsaiditmedia3226 ► Want the ‘coldest' water? https://thecoldestwater.com/?ref=ashleybrown12 ► Become A Podcast Legend: http://ashsaidit.podcastersmastery.zaxaa.com/s/6543767021305 ► Review Us: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ash-said-it/id1144197789 ► SUBSCRIBE HERE: http://www.youtube.com/c/AshSaidItSuwanee ► Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/1loveash ► Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ashsaidit ► Twitter: https://twitter.com/1loveAsh ► Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/u/0/+AshSaidItMedia ► Blog: http://www.ashsaidit.com/blog ► Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/1LoveAsh/ ► Newsletter: manage1.com/subscribe?u=2a2ca3b799467f125b53863http://ashsaidit.us11.list-c8&id=a6f43cd472 #atlanta #ashsaidit #ashsaidthat #ashblogsit #ashsaidit® Ash Brown is a gifted American producer, blogger, speaker, media personality and event emcee. The blog on AshSaidit.com showcases exclusive event invites, product reviews and so much more. Her motivational podcast "Ash Said It Daily" is available on major media platforms such as iTunes, Spotify, iHeart Radio & Google Podcasts. This program has over half a million streams worldwide. She uses these mediums to motivate & encourage her audience in the most powerful way. She keeps it real!
Geekey is an innovative, compact multi-tool that expertly combines your go-to tools into one simple device you can carry with you anywhere. It's fully equipped with more than 16+ functions to help you tackle those common, everyday problems, including an innovative metric and imperial sized closed wrench and bit driver for quick fixes, TSA-compliant serrated edge and handy scoring tip, a bike spoke wrench for those off the grid rides, and even a bottle opener. Web: https://www.getgeekey.com Follow: @getgeekey About: The smart design of the Geekey Multi-tool is lightweight and compact enough to fit right on your keyring, and crafted from incredibly durable 420 stainless steel that's designed to last through a lifetime of adventures. Created for bikers, outdoor adventurers, handymen, and everyone else looking to always be prepared at a moments notice, Geekey is truly a work of art and engineering that delivers endless capability. Geekey features include a Smoking Pipe, 3.2/3.3mm Bike Spoke Key, a Screw Driver tip that will fit a #2/3 Slotted, #2 Square Drive, #2/3 Phillips, and #2/3 Combinations (Phillips/Slotted or Phillips/Square) screw all in one bit, Imperial and Metric Closed Wrench, ¼ inch Open Wrench, ¼ inch Bit Driver, Scoring Tip, Serrated Edge, Can Opener, Wire Stripper, File, Imperial and Metric Ruler, Protractor, Bottle Opener, Multi-head fit Driver, and Lanyard Hole. About the show: ► Website: http://www.ashsaidit.com ► Got Goli Gummies? https://go.goli.com/1loveash5 ► For $5 in ride credit, download the Lyft app using my referral link: https://www.lyft.com/ici/ASH584216 ► For discount Pangea Products: https://embracepangaea.grsm.io/ashsaiditmedia3226 ► Want the ‘coldest' water? https://thecoldestwater.com/?ref=ashleybrown12 ► Become A Podcast Legend: http://ashsaidit.podcastersmastery.zaxaa.com/s/6543767021305 ► Review Us: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ash-said-it/id1144197789 ► SUBSCRIBE HERE: http://www.youtube.com/c/AshSaidItSuwanee ► Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/1loveash ► Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ashsaidit ► Twitter: https://twitter.com/1loveAsh ► Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/u/0/+AshSaidItMedia ► Blog: http://www.ashsaidit.com/blog ► Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/1LoveAsh/ ► Newsletter: manage1.com/subscribe?u=2a2ca3b799467f125b53863http://ashsaidit.us11.list-c8&id=a6f43cd472 #atlanta #ashsaidit #ashsaidthat #ashblogsit #ashsaidit® Ash Brown is a gifted American producer, blogger, speaker, media personality and event emcee. The blog on AshSaidit.com showcases exclusive event invites, product reviews and so much more. Her motivational podcast "Ash Said It Daily" is available on major media platforms such as iTunes, Spotify, iHeart Radio & Google Podcasts. This program has over half a million streams worldwide. She uses these mediums to motivate & encourage her audience in the most powerful way. She keeps it real!
In the conclusion of our four-part series on testing in Angular, we sat down with Keen Yee Liau. Keen leads the tooling team as part of the Angular Team at Google. Externally, the tooling team ships the Angular CLI, which includes the out-of-the-box end-to-end testing tool called Protractor. Join panelists Aaron Frost, Brian Love, and Jennifer Wadella as we learn from Keen about the current direction of Protractor.The recently released version 7 of Protractor focused solely on security issues, resulting in the necessity to update dependencies, leading to a major release bump. If you've been using Protractor for some time, you might be asking, "Wait, what happened to version 6?" Well, v6 was a release-to-evaluate webdriver version 4 (still in alpha) and was never released, and likely won't ever be released. It goes down as a fun bit of history along with Angular version 3.Keen shared with the panelists how the tooling team (and the Angular team at large) is reflecting on the strategy and direction of Angular and the tooling infrastructure. Keen and his team are evaluating the landscape of testing, both within Google and broadly within the ecosystem. Given the current evaluation, make no mistake, Protractor is widely used within Google, and the tooling team is committed to supporting and improving Protractor for the 1,100 + Angular applications at Google as well as the thousands of applications in the community that use Protractor for end-to-end testing. The Angular Team is committed to not leaving anyone behind in the story of Angular. Rest assured, this includes projects that use Protractor. But Keen is also looking for feedback from YOU! His DMs are open at @liauky. We look forward to the future of testing Angular applications!
Today we're working with Protractor (and a couple of high-performing shops) to discuss how inefficiencies in the shop add up in time, and dollars, tempting Service Advisors to take shortcuts. So let's make it easier for them to build the estimate. We'll explore the integration with Protractor and AutoVitals, and how it allows our shops to simplify the RO writing process and how to identify opportunities to get to the best possible use of your SA’s time.
EP 14 - Featuring Martin Holsinger W: Protractor Media - A Finer Touch Construction Podcast by Brad Leavitt
A Finer Touch Construction Podcast - EP 14 - Featuring Martin Holsinger W: Protractor Media by Brad Leavitt
Getting two platforms to play nicely together isn't always a walk in the park. On this week's episode, Jodi Knepper from Lee Myles Automotive in Reading, PA and our own Sara Savio join host Tom Dorsey to discuss what a tremendous partnership Protractor and AutoVitals can make when paired correctly.
From working on highway construction projects to high rise condominiums, Ryan Hay @oakmanbuildingco is a dynamic Protractor with a dynamic skill set. In this episode he discusses what it took to scale his contracting business in the heart of Austin, TX. Also mentioned in this episode: Toby Cornell From Cornell Custom Construction Extreme Ownership - Book about leadership Contractor Tools - Estimating software Johnny Hourihan Shawn Van Dyke
In this episode Martin reads an article from the Protractor Blog entitled: [Top 5 People A Contractor Should Have On Speed Dial] written by Jonathan Walters. Protractor website client mentioned in this episode is Joe Wilkerson from Maplehurst Outdoor Living. https://www.maplehurstoutdoorliving.com Book recommended in this episode is The EMyth Revisited by Michael Gerber. You can find a link to this book on this page: https://protractorpodcast.com/resources/
This episode of Tile Money is brought to you by the National Tile Contractors Association and Sponsored by Laticrete International. It was my pleasure to interview Martin Holsinger, I have been listening to Martin's Podcast, The Protractor, for over a year now and have gained valuable insights. Martin gets into the topic of Marketing your Tile Installation Business. Specifically marketing with a purpose, we want our potential customer's to get to know, like and trust us, even before they pick up the phone to schedule an estimate. You can learn more about Martin and what it means to be a Protractor by visiting his website, https://protractorpodcast.com/ https://www.tile-assn.com/# https://laticrete.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/luke190/message
After a hearing disability left him barred from his dream of working in law enforcement, Jesse Hoover stumbled into wood working and professional contracting. In this episode, he shares his journey and explains how Instagram has proved to be one of his most powerful marketing tools.
Panel: Charles Max Wood Joe Eames John Papa Alyssa Nicoll Special Guest: Michael Giambalvo In this episode, Chuck talks with special guest Michael Giambalvo who is an author of the book titled, “Testing Angular Applications.” This book can be purchased through Amazon, Manning Publications, among other sites, too. The panelists and the guest talk about different types of tests, such as end-to-end testing and unit testing. They also talk about Angular, Java, Mocha, Test Café, and much more! Check it out! Show Topics: 0:00 – Advertisement: AngularBootCamp.Com 0:53 – Chuck: Our panel is John Papa, Joe Eames, Alyssa Nicoll, and myself. My new show is the DevRev – check it out, please! 1:26 – Guest: I am a contributing author to our new book, which is about Angular. 1:56 – Chuck: How is it like to write with multiple people? 2:04 – Guest: Yep it’s hard b/c we are in different areas. Back in the 2.0 days, Jesse was writing a book. He was talking about typescript and components. Craig made friends with Jesse and they were talking about the book he was writing. Then we all jumped in to get in finished. We all had areas that we were specialists in! 3:21 – Alyssa: If you break it up that makes sense. 3:31 – Guest. 3:40 – Panel: Pick different words and go around the room. 3:51 – Panel: You write the first ½ of a sentence and then you write the other ½ of the sentence! 4:10 – Guest: You have these big word documents and go back-and-forth. 4:36 – Alyssa: Editing and then pass it back-and-forth – how does that work? 4:46 – Guest: It’s like 8 pass backs-and-forth. 5:35 – Guest: The editing was the main issue – it took forever! 5:50 – Chuck: We were going to co-author a book and we didn’t. Chuck: If you could break down the book in 4 core topics what would they be? Elevator pitch? What is the starting knowledge? 6:18 – Guest: We expect you to know Angular Intro and that’s it! 6:43 – Chuck: What are the principles? 6:50 – Guest: We talk about the testing component. We highlight the benefits of using Angular vs. Angular.js. That shows up in the book a lot. It’s very example driven. 7:28 – Chuck: We have been talking about testing quite a bit on the show lately. 8:22 – Chuck: Do you see people using the testing in regards to the pyramid? 8:33 – Guest: I am not a huge fan of the pyramid. Some questions I ask are: Does it run quickly? Is it reliable? To give you some background I work on Google Club Platform. 10:21 – The guest talks about “Page Level Integration Tests.” 11:31 – Alyssa. 11:50 – Chuck: After your explanation after writing your book I’m sure it’s a breeze now. Knowing these tests and having the confidence is great. 12:13 – Guest: Tools like Cypress is very helpful. Web Driver Testing, too. 12:43 – Chuck: Where do people start? What do you recommend? Do they start at Protractor or do they come down to unit tests? 13:02 – Guest: Finding the balance is important. 14:30 – Chuck: Check out a past episode that we’ve done. 14:40 – Panel asks a question about tools such as Test Café and Cypress. 14:50 – Guest: I really don’t know Test Café. There is a long story in how all of these fit together. The guest talks about Selenium, Cypress, Safari, Edge, Chrome, Firefox, and Puppeteer! 19:24 – Chuck: Does it work in Electron as well, too? 19:26 – Guest: Good question but I don’t know the answer. 19:39 – Chuck: Maybe a listener could write a comment and tell us. 19:43 – Panel: I’ve used Protractor for many years. I like the explanation that you just gave. The great thing about Protractor is that you can... 20:29 – Guest: We wanted to explain the difficulty of Protractor in this book. Guest: You have this test running in Node but then you have your app running in the browser. You have these 2 different run times. You might have to run them separately and there is tons of complexity. 21:15 – Panel: As I am coding you have this visual browser on one side, and then on the other side you have... 22:22 – Guest asks the panelists a question. 22:32 – Panel: I have only used it for a few months and a few several apps but haven’t had those issues, yet. 22:55 – Guest: I haven’t heard of Test Café at all. 23:05 – Alyssa: Is the book online? 23:13 – Guest: It’s available through Manning Publications and Amazon. I think we have some codes to giveaway! 23:34 – Chuck: Yeah, we are working on those codes and giveaways. We have mentioned about 5 or 6 tools – are you worried about your book going out of date? 24:05 – Guest: Sure that is something we are worried about. When editing took a long time to get through that was one of my thoughts. The guest talks about Selenium, control flow, Protractor, 25:45 – Guest (continues): These new features were coming out while the book was coming out – so there’s that. What’s this thing about control flow and why this matters to you, etc. We were able to add that into the book, which is good. We were able to get those instructions out there. Books have a delay to them. 26:47 – Chuck: We talked about this in JavaScript Jabber. This guest talked about this and he is from Big Nerd Ranch. At what point do you have this breaking point: This isn’t a good fit for Test Café or Selenium BUT a good fit for Mocha or Jest? 27:27 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 28:04 – Guest: Do you have a reason why you would switch testing tools? 28:12 – Chuck. 28:41 – Guest: That’s the tradeoff as you move down the ladder. 29:43 – Panel: If you want to trigger an action that isn’t triggerable? 29:50 – Guest answers the question. 30:07 – Panel. 30:20 – Chuck. 30:33 – Guest: You can access code. Usually something in a workflow will make it happen. You have to fall back on some type of UI sort of thing. It’s almost like doing Tetris! I’ve never had to directly call something. I am not the best one to answer that. 31:16 – Panel: It’s like a weird mix of tests. 31:29 – Panelist is talking about unit testing and other tests. 31:55 – Chuck asks a question. 32:02 – Guest: It depends on the scale of your project. 32:28 – Chuck: Do you guys use a test coverage tool or on the side of: everything should run and then test if there is a bug. 32:43 – Guest: Coverage isn’t the full story. 33:26 – Panel: You said you weren’t a fan of the testing pyramid – can you explain why? 33:43 – Guest: I think it turns too much prescriptive. Guest: I think there are bigger concerns out there and the test pyramid is an over-simplification. 35:22 – Panel: What’s the difference between fast and slow testing? 35:28 – Guest: It really depends on your level of knowledge. If your test suite runs more than twenty minutes to an hour that is probably too slow! 36:03 – Alyssa. 36:09 – Chuck. 36:16 – Alyssa: There is no way that 20 minutes equals that! 36:26 – Guest: 20 minutes is the extreme limit. 36:51 – Chuck. 37:11 – Panel: Any new Twitter news on Trump? 37:21 – Panelist talks about test suites! 37:40 – Panelists and guests go back-and-forth. 38:11 – Chuck: Do you have any recommendations for the unit testing? Keeping it small or not so much? 38:29 – Guest: Think: What is this test asking? Don’t write tests that won’t fail if some other tests could have caught them. 39:04 – Alyssa: That’s smart! 39:09 – Guest continues. 39:28 – Chuck: What else to jump on? Chuck: Do you write your tests in typescript or in Java? 39:48 – Guest answers the question. He mentions Python, typescript, and more! 40:17 – Alyssa. 40:22 – Guest continues. 40:46 – Alyssa: How many people worked on that project? 40:50 – Guest: 2 or 3 framework engineers who did the tooling. About 20 people total for tooling to make sure everything worked. 41:18 – Panelist asks a question. 41:22 – Guest: About 20 minutes! 42:35 – Guest wants to talk about the topic: end-to-end testing! 44:59 – Chuck: Let’s do picks! 45:09 – Fresh Books! END – CacheFly! Links: Vue jQuery Angular JavaScript Python React Cypress Puppeteer – GitHub Protractor Test Mocha.js Selenium C# GitHub: testcafe Istanbul “Protractor: A New Hope” – YouTube Video – Michael Giambalvo & Craig Nishina Book: “Testing Angular Applications” – Manning Publications Michael’s GitHub Michael’s Twitter Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Cache Fly Picks: Alyssa Fantastic Beasts Joe Skyward War of the Spider Queen Luxur - board game Testing Angular with Cypress.io Space Cadets Sonar Family Charles The DevRev Podcast Gary Vee Audio Experience Michael Scale Captain Sonar
Panel: Charles Max Wood Joe Eames John Papa Alyssa Nicoll Special Guest: Michael Giambalvo In this episode, Chuck talks with special guest Michael Giambalvo who is an author of the book titled, “Testing Angular Applications.” This book can be purchased through Amazon, Manning Publications, among other sites, too. The panelists and the guest talk about different types of tests, such as end-to-end testing and unit testing. They also talk about Angular, Java, Mocha, Test Café, and much more! Check it out! Show Topics: 0:00 – Advertisement: AngularBootCamp.Com 0:53 – Chuck: Our panel is John Papa, Joe Eames, Alyssa Nicoll, and myself. My new show is the DevRev – check it out, please! 1:26 – Guest: I am a contributing author to our new book, which is about Angular. 1:56 – Chuck: How is it like to write with multiple people? 2:04 – Guest: Yep it’s hard b/c we are in different areas. Back in the 2.0 days, Jesse was writing a book. He was talking about typescript and components. Craig made friends with Jesse and they were talking about the book he was writing. Then we all jumped in to get in finished. We all had areas that we were specialists in! 3:21 – Alyssa: If you break it up that makes sense. 3:31 – Guest. 3:40 – Panel: Pick different words and go around the room. 3:51 – Panel: You write the first ½ of a sentence and then you write the other ½ of the sentence! 4:10 – Guest: You have these big word documents and go back-and-forth. 4:36 – Alyssa: Editing and then pass it back-and-forth – how does that work? 4:46 – Guest: It’s like 8 pass backs-and-forth. 5:35 – Guest: The editing was the main issue – it took forever! 5:50 – Chuck: We were going to co-author a book and we didn’t. Chuck: If you could break down the book in 4 core topics what would they be? Elevator pitch? What is the starting knowledge? 6:18 – Guest: We expect you to know Angular Intro and that’s it! 6:43 – Chuck: What are the principles? 6:50 – Guest: We talk about the testing component. We highlight the benefits of using Angular vs. Angular.js. That shows up in the book a lot. It’s very example driven. 7:28 – Chuck: We have been talking about testing quite a bit on the show lately. 8:22 – Chuck: Do you see people using the testing in regards to the pyramid? 8:33 – Guest: I am not a huge fan of the pyramid. Some questions I ask are: Does it run quickly? Is it reliable? To give you some background I work on Google Club Platform. 10:21 – The guest talks about “Page Level Integration Tests.” 11:31 – Alyssa. 11:50 – Chuck: After your explanation after writing your book I’m sure it’s a breeze now. Knowing these tests and having the confidence is great. 12:13 – Guest: Tools like Cypress is very helpful. Web Driver Testing, too. 12:43 – Chuck: Where do people start? What do you recommend? Do they start at Protractor or do they come down to unit tests? 13:02 – Guest: Finding the balance is important. 14:30 – Chuck: Check out a past episode that we’ve done. 14:40 – Panel asks a question about tools such as Test Café and Cypress. 14:50 – Guest: I really don’t know Test Café. There is a long story in how all of these fit together. The guest talks about Selenium, Cypress, Safari, Edge, Chrome, Firefox, and Puppeteer! 19:24 – Chuck: Does it work in Electron as well, too? 19:26 – Guest: Good question but I don’t know the answer. 19:39 – Chuck: Maybe a listener could write a comment and tell us. 19:43 – Panel: I’ve used Protractor for many years. I like the explanation that you just gave. The great thing about Protractor is that you can... 20:29 – Guest: We wanted to explain the difficulty of Protractor in this book. Guest: You have this test running in Node but then you have your app running in the browser. You have these 2 different run times. You might have to run them separately and there is tons of complexity. 21:15 – Panel: As I am coding you have this visual browser on one side, and then on the other side you have... 22:22 – Guest asks the panelists a question. 22:32 – Panel: I have only used it for a few months and a few several apps but haven’t had those issues, yet. 22:55 – Guest: I haven’t heard of Test Café at all. 23:05 – Alyssa: Is the book online? 23:13 – Guest: It’s available through Manning Publications and Amazon. I think we have some codes to giveaway! 23:34 – Chuck: Yeah, we are working on those codes and giveaways. We have mentioned about 5 or 6 tools – are you worried about your book going out of date? 24:05 – Guest: Sure that is something we are worried about. When editing took a long time to get through that was one of my thoughts. The guest talks about Selenium, control flow, Protractor, 25:45 – Guest (continues): These new features were coming out while the book was coming out – so there’s that. What’s this thing about control flow and why this matters to you, etc. We were able to add that into the book, which is good. We were able to get those instructions out there. Books have a delay to them. 26:47 – Chuck: We talked about this in JavaScript Jabber. This guest talked about this and he is from Big Nerd Ranch. At what point do you have this breaking point: This isn’t a good fit for Test Café or Selenium BUT a good fit for Mocha or Jest? 27:27 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 28:04 – Guest: Do you have a reason why you would switch testing tools? 28:12 – Chuck. 28:41 – Guest: That’s the tradeoff as you move down the ladder. 29:43 – Panel: If you want to trigger an action that isn’t triggerable? 29:50 – Guest answers the question. 30:07 – Panel. 30:20 – Chuck. 30:33 – Guest: You can access code. Usually something in a workflow will make it happen. You have to fall back on some type of UI sort of thing. It’s almost like doing Tetris! I’ve never had to directly call something. I am not the best one to answer that. 31:16 – Panel: It’s like a weird mix of tests. 31:29 – Panelist is talking about unit testing and other tests. 31:55 – Chuck asks a question. 32:02 – Guest: It depends on the scale of your project. 32:28 – Chuck: Do you guys use a test coverage tool or on the side of: everything should run and then test if there is a bug. 32:43 – Guest: Coverage isn’t the full story. 33:26 – Panel: You said you weren’t a fan of the testing pyramid – can you explain why? 33:43 – Guest: I think it turns too much prescriptive. Guest: I think there are bigger concerns out there and the test pyramid is an over-simplification. 35:22 – Panel: What’s the difference between fast and slow testing? 35:28 – Guest: It really depends on your level of knowledge. If your test suite runs more than twenty minutes to an hour that is probably too slow! 36:03 – Alyssa. 36:09 – Chuck. 36:16 – Alyssa: There is no way that 20 minutes equals that! 36:26 – Guest: 20 minutes is the extreme limit. 36:51 – Chuck. 37:11 – Panel: Any new Twitter news on Trump? 37:21 – Panelist talks about test suites! 37:40 – Panelists and guests go back-and-forth. 38:11 – Chuck: Do you have any recommendations for the unit testing? Keeping it small or not so much? 38:29 – Guest: Think: What is this test asking? Don’t write tests that won’t fail if some other tests could have caught them. 39:04 – Alyssa: That’s smart! 39:09 – Guest continues. 39:28 – Chuck: What else to jump on? Chuck: Do you write your tests in typescript or in Java? 39:48 – Guest answers the question. He mentions Python, typescript, and more! 40:17 – Alyssa. 40:22 – Guest continues. 40:46 – Alyssa: How many people worked on that project? 40:50 – Guest: 2 or 3 framework engineers who did the tooling. About 20 people total for tooling to make sure everything worked. 41:18 – Panelist asks a question. 41:22 – Guest: About 20 minutes! 42:35 – Guest wants to talk about the topic: end-to-end testing! 44:59 – Chuck: Let’s do picks! 45:09 – Fresh Books! END – CacheFly! Links: Vue jQuery Angular JavaScript Python React Cypress Puppeteer – GitHub Protractor Test Mocha.js Selenium C# GitHub: testcafe Istanbul “Protractor: A New Hope” – YouTube Video – Michael Giambalvo & Craig Nishina Book: “Testing Angular Applications” – Manning Publications Michael’s GitHub Michael’s Twitter Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Cache Fly Picks: Alyssa Fantastic Beasts Joe Skyward War of the Spider Queen Luxur - board game Testing Angular with Cypress.io Space Cadets Sonar Family Charles The DevRev Podcast Gary Vee Audio Experience Michael Scale Captain Sonar
Panel: Charles Max Wood Joe Eames John Papa Alyssa Nicoll Special Guest: Michael Giambalvo In this episode, Chuck talks with special guest Michael Giambalvo who is an author of the book titled, “Testing Angular Applications.” This book can be purchased through Amazon, Manning Publications, among other sites, too. The panelists and the guest talk about different types of tests, such as end-to-end testing and unit testing. They also talk about Angular, Java, Mocha, Test Café, and much more! Check it out! Show Topics: 0:00 – Advertisement: AngularBootCamp.Com 0:53 – Chuck: Our panel is John Papa, Joe Eames, Alyssa Nicoll, and myself. My new show is the DevRev – check it out, please! 1:26 – Guest: I am a contributing author to our new book, which is about Angular. 1:56 – Chuck: How is it like to write with multiple people? 2:04 – Guest: Yep it’s hard b/c we are in different areas. Back in the 2.0 days, Jesse was writing a book. He was talking about typescript and components. Craig made friends with Jesse and they were talking about the book he was writing. Then we all jumped in to get in finished. We all had areas that we were specialists in! 3:21 – Alyssa: If you break it up that makes sense. 3:31 – Guest. 3:40 – Panel: Pick different words and go around the room. 3:51 – Panel: You write the first ½ of a sentence and then you write the other ½ of the sentence! 4:10 – Guest: You have these big word documents and go back-and-forth. 4:36 – Alyssa: Editing and then pass it back-and-forth – how does that work? 4:46 – Guest: It’s like 8 pass backs-and-forth. 5:35 – Guest: The editing was the main issue – it took forever! 5:50 – Chuck: We were going to co-author a book and we didn’t. Chuck: If you could break down the book in 4 core topics what would they be? Elevator pitch? What is the starting knowledge? 6:18 – Guest: We expect you to know Angular Intro and that’s it! 6:43 – Chuck: What are the principles? 6:50 – Guest: We talk about the testing component. We highlight the benefits of using Angular vs. Angular.js. That shows up in the book a lot. It’s very example driven. 7:28 – Chuck: We have been talking about testing quite a bit on the show lately. 8:22 – Chuck: Do you see people using the testing in regards to the pyramid? 8:33 – Guest: I am not a huge fan of the pyramid. Some questions I ask are: Does it run quickly? Is it reliable? To give you some background I work on Google Club Platform. 10:21 – The guest talks about “Page Level Integration Tests.” 11:31 – Alyssa. 11:50 – Chuck: After your explanation after writing your book I’m sure it’s a breeze now. Knowing these tests and having the confidence is great. 12:13 – Guest: Tools like Cypress is very helpful. Web Driver Testing, too. 12:43 – Chuck: Where do people start? What do you recommend? Do they start at Protractor or do they come down to unit tests? 13:02 – Guest: Finding the balance is important. 14:30 – Chuck: Check out a past episode that we’ve done. 14:40 – Panel asks a question about tools such as Test Café and Cypress. 14:50 – Guest: I really don’t know Test Café. There is a long story in how all of these fit together. The guest talks about Selenium, Cypress, Safari, Edge, Chrome, Firefox, and Puppeteer! 19:24 – Chuck: Does it work in Electron as well, too? 19:26 – Guest: Good question but I don’t know the answer. 19:39 – Chuck: Maybe a listener could write a comment and tell us. 19:43 – Panel: I’ve used Protractor for many years. I like the explanation that you just gave. The great thing about Protractor is that you can... 20:29 – Guest: We wanted to explain the difficulty of Protractor in this book. Guest: You have this test running in Node but then you have your app running in the browser. You have these 2 different run times. You might have to run them separately and there is tons of complexity. 21:15 – Panel: As I am coding you have this visual browser on one side, and then on the other side you have... 22:22 – Guest asks the panelists a question. 22:32 – Panel: I have only used it for a few months and a few several apps but haven’t had those issues, yet. 22:55 – Guest: I haven’t heard of Test Café at all. 23:05 – Alyssa: Is the book online? 23:13 – Guest: It’s available through Manning Publications and Amazon. I think we have some codes to giveaway! 23:34 – Chuck: Yeah, we are working on those codes and giveaways. We have mentioned about 5 or 6 tools – are you worried about your book going out of date? 24:05 – Guest: Sure that is something we are worried about. When editing took a long time to get through that was one of my thoughts. The guest talks about Selenium, control flow, Protractor, 25:45 – Guest (continues): These new features were coming out while the book was coming out – so there’s that. What’s this thing about control flow and why this matters to you, etc. We were able to add that into the book, which is good. We were able to get those instructions out there. Books have a delay to them. 26:47 – Chuck: We talked about this in JavaScript Jabber. This guest talked about this and he is from Big Nerd Ranch. At what point do you have this breaking point: This isn’t a good fit for Test Café or Selenium BUT a good fit for Mocha or Jest? 27:27 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 28:04 – Guest: Do you have a reason why you would switch testing tools? 28:12 – Chuck. 28:41 – Guest: That’s the tradeoff as you move down the ladder. 29:43 – Panel: If you want to trigger an action that isn’t triggerable? 29:50 – Guest answers the question. 30:07 – Panel. 30:20 – Chuck. 30:33 – Guest: You can access code. Usually something in a workflow will make it happen. You have to fall back on some type of UI sort of thing. It’s almost like doing Tetris! I’ve never had to directly call something. I am not the best one to answer that. 31:16 – Panel: It’s like a weird mix of tests. 31:29 – Panelist is talking about unit testing and other tests. 31:55 – Chuck asks a question. 32:02 – Guest: It depends on the scale of your project. 32:28 – Chuck: Do you guys use a test coverage tool or on the side of: everything should run and then test if there is a bug. 32:43 – Guest: Coverage isn’t the full story. 33:26 – Panel: You said you weren’t a fan of the testing pyramid – can you explain why? 33:43 – Guest: I think it turns too much prescriptive. Guest: I think there are bigger concerns out there and the test pyramid is an over-simplification. 35:22 – Panel: What’s the difference between fast and slow testing? 35:28 – Guest: It really depends on your level of knowledge. If your test suite runs more than twenty minutes to an hour that is probably too slow! 36:03 – Alyssa. 36:09 – Chuck. 36:16 – Alyssa: There is no way that 20 minutes equals that! 36:26 – Guest: 20 minutes is the extreme limit. 36:51 – Chuck. 37:11 – Panel: Any new Twitter news on Trump? 37:21 – Panelist talks about test suites! 37:40 – Panelists and guests go back-and-forth. 38:11 – Chuck: Do you have any recommendations for the unit testing? Keeping it small or not so much? 38:29 – Guest: Think: What is this test asking? Don’t write tests that won’t fail if some other tests could have caught them. 39:04 – Alyssa: That’s smart! 39:09 – Guest continues. 39:28 – Chuck: What else to jump on? Chuck: Do you write your tests in typescript or in Java? 39:48 – Guest answers the question. He mentions Python, typescript, and more! 40:17 – Alyssa. 40:22 – Guest continues. 40:46 – Alyssa: How many people worked on that project? 40:50 – Guest: 2 or 3 framework engineers who did the tooling. About 20 people total for tooling to make sure everything worked. 41:18 – Panelist asks a question. 41:22 – Guest: About 20 minutes! 42:35 – Guest wants to talk about the topic: end-to-end testing! 44:59 – Chuck: Let’s do picks! 45:09 – Fresh Books! END – CacheFly! Links: Vue jQuery Angular JavaScript Python React Cypress Puppeteer – GitHub Protractor Test Mocha.js Selenium C# GitHub: testcafe Istanbul “Protractor: A New Hope” – YouTube Video – Michael Giambalvo & Craig Nishina Book: “Testing Angular Applications” – Manning Publications Michael’s GitHub Michael’s Twitter Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Cache Fly Picks: Alyssa Fantastic Beasts Joe Skyward War of the Spider Queen Luxur - board game Testing Angular with Cypress.io Space Cadets Sonar Family Charles The DevRev Podcast Gary Vee Audio Experience Michael Scale Captain Sonar
Recording date: 2018-09-13 Tweet John Papa https://twitter.com/john_papa Ward Bell https://twitter.com/wardbell Dan Wahlin https://twitter.com/danwahlin (0:03:30) Ward asks Dan when there are too many end to end tests (0:04:23) Dan talks about how he got into end to end tests (0:06:42) Ward talks about how he approaches testing a component (0:07:50) Dan talks about how deep routes in javascript frameworks help end to end testing (0:10:00) John asks Dan about how testing workflows can be a sweet spot for end to end tests (0:10:47) John asks Dan how he uses id vs class in elements to locate what he wants to test (0:12:20) Dan mentions how he uses css selectors to locate what he wants to test (0:12:50) Ward says don't drill down through your HTML to locate elements for testing (0:15:47) Dan talks about his experience with Protractor and Selenium https://www.seleniumhq.org/ (0:16:26) Dan talks about how he uses Cypress.io https://www.cypress.io/ (0:18:40) Dan talks abot how Cypress.io doesn't work in all browsers (0:19:10) Ward mentions how he uses Test Cafe http://devexpress.github.io/testcafe/ (0:19:50) Dan discusses his pain points for testing child routing without end to end tests (0:21:00) Dan says he wrote his first 5 or 10 tests with Cypress within an hour (0:21:36) Ward says end to end tests can be more fragile and slower than unit tests (0:21:56) Ward says his large team uses end to end tests because it makes sure that nobody breaks anybody else (0:24:25) Dan says Cypress is pretty fast to run (0:24:58) Dan says he uses TypeScript a lot (0:25:20) John asks Dan "how fast is fast?" (0:27:00) John asks Dan to clarify how he handles authenticating during an end to end test (0:28:30) Ward asks Dan how if he opens the browser for each test, or once for the entire sequence of tests (0:30:00) Dan disucsses how he uses containers for testing (0:21:40) Edge browser https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/microsoft-edge (0:23:37) Sauce Labs https://saucelabs.com/ (0:31:28) John talks about security expert Brian Clark https://twitter.com/_clarkio (0:32:10) Ward discusses how animations can cause tests to run slower (0:33:30) Dan says Cypress is good at responding in github (0:34:03) Cypress on twitter https://twitter.com/Cypress_io (0:34:14) Cypress github issues https://github.com/cypress-io/cypress/issues (0:38:25) Dan talks about Electron https://electronjs.org/ (0:39:00) Dan talks about time travel in cypress's test tools (0:42:03) Cross browser testing in Cypress.io https://github.com/cypress-io/cypress/issues/310 (0:49:00) John asks Dan about how you can use npm install for cypress (0:50:19) Dan talks about how it works (Cypress.io) https://www.cypress.io/how-it-works/ (0:51:10) Cypress Docs https://docs.cypress.io/guides/overview/why-cypress.html (0:53:47) Someone to follow: Brandon Roberts https://twitter.com/brandontroberts (0:54:05) Someone to follow: Tracy Lee https://twitter.com/ladyleet and https://www.thisdot.co/labs (0:55:00) Someone to follow: Netanel Basal https://twitter.com/NetanelBasal and https://github.com/datorama/akita (0:55:48) Someone to follow: Alyssa Nicoll https://twitter.com/AlyssaNicoll More Resources Wahlin Consulting (https://codewithdan.com)
Panel: AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight Joe Eames Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Vitali Zaidman In this episode, the panel talks with programmer, Vitali Zaidman, who is working with Software Solutions Company. He researches technologies and starts new projects all the time, and looks at these new technologies within the market. The panel talks about testing JavaScript in 2018 and Jest. Show Topics: 1:32 – Chuck: Let’s talk about testing JavaScript in 2018. 1:53 – Vitali talks about solving problems in JavaScript. 2:46 – Chuck asks Vitali a question. 3:03 – Vitali’s answer. 3:30 – Why Jest? Why not Mocha or these other programs? 3:49 – Jest is the best interruption of what testing should look like and the best practice nowadays. There are different options, they can be better, but Jest has this great support from their community. There are great new features. 4:31 – Chuck to Joe: What are you using for testing nowadays? 4:43 – Joe: I use Angular, primarily. 6:01 – Like life, it’s sometimes easier to use things that make things very valuable. 7:55 – Aimee: I have heard great things about Cypress, but at work we are using another program. 8:22 – Vitali: Check out my article. 8:51 – Aimee: There are too many problems with the program that we use at work. 9:39 – Panelist to Vitali: I read your article, and I am a fan. Why do you pick Test Café over Cypress, and how familiar are you with Cypress? What about Selenium and other programs? 10:12 – Vitali: “Test Café and Cypress are competing head-to-head.” Listen to Vitali’s suggestions and comments per the panelists’ question at this timestamp. 11:25 – Chuck: I see that you use sign-on... 12:29 – Aimee: Can you talk about Puppeteer? It seems promising. 12:45 – Vitali: Yes, Puppeteer is promising. It’s developed by Google and by Chrome. You don’t want to use all of your tests in Puppeteer, because it will be really hard to do in other browsers. 13:26: Panelist: “...5, 6, 7, years ago it was important of any kind of JavaScript testing you had no idea if it worked in one browser and it not necessarily works in another browser. That was 10 years ago. Is multiple browsers testing as important then as it is now? 14:51: Vitali answers the above question. 15:30 – Aimee: If it is more JavaScript heavy then it could possibly cause more problems. 15:56 – Panelist: I agree with this. 16:02 – Vitali continues this conversation with additional comments. 16:17 – Aimee: “I see that Safari is the new Internet Explorer.” 16:23: Chuck: “Yes, you have to know your audience. Are they using older browsers? What is the compatibility?” 17:01 – Vitali: There are issues with the security. Firefox has a feature of tracking protection; something like that. 17:33 – Question to Vitali by Panelist. 17:55 – Vitali answers the question. 18:30 – Panelist makes additional comments. 18:43 – If you use Safari, you reap what you sow. 18:49 – Chuck: I use Chrome on my iPhone. (Aimee does, too.) Sometimes I wind up in Safari by accident. 19:38 – Panelist makes comments. 19:52 – Vitali tells a funny story that relates to this topic. 20:45 – There are too many standards out there. 21:05 – Aimee makes comments. 21:08 – Brutalist Web Design. Some guy has this site – Brutalist Web Design – where he says use basic stuff and stop being so custom. Stop using the web as some crazy platform, and if your site is a website that can be scrolled through, that’s great. It needs to be just enough for people to see your content. 22:16 – Aimee makes additional comments about this topic of Brutalist Web Design. 22:35 – Panelist: I like it when people go out and say things like that. 22:45 – Here is the point, though. There is a difference between a website and a web application. Really the purpose is to read an article. 23:37 – Vitali chimes in. 24:01 – Back to the topic of content on websites. 25:17 – Panelist: Medium is very minimal. Medium doesn’t feel like an application. 26:10 – Is the website easy enough for the user to scroll through and get the content like they want to? 26:19 – Advertisement. 27:22 – See how far off the topic we got? 27:31 – These are my favorite conversations to have. 27:39 – Vitali: Let’s talk about how my article got so popular. It’s an interesting thing, I started researching “testing” for my company. We wanted to implement one of the testing tools. Instead of creating a presentation, I would write first about it in Medium to get feedback from the community as well. It was a great decision, because I got a lot of comments back. I enjoyed the experience, too. Just write about your problem in Medium to see what people say. 28:48 – Panelist: You put a ton of time and energy in this article. There are tons of links. Did you really go through all of those articles? 29:10 – Yes, what are the most permanent tools? I was just reading through a lot of comments and feedback from people. I tested the tools myself, too! 29:37 – Panelist: You broke down the article, and it’s a 22-minute read. 30:09 – Vitali: I wrote the article for my company, and they ad to read it. 30:24 – Panelist: Spending so much time – you probably felt like it was apart of your job. 30:39 – Vitali: I really like creating and writing. It was rally amazing for me and a great experience. I feel like I am talented in this area because I write well and fast. I wanted to express myself. 31:17 – Did you edit and review? 31:23 – Vitali: I wrote it by myself and some friends read it. There were serious mistakes, and that’s okay I am not afraid of mistakes. This way you get feedback. 32:10 – Chuck: “Some people see testing in JavaScript, and people look at this and say there are so much here. Is there a place where people can start, so that way they don’t’ get too overwhelmed? Is there a way to ease into this and take a bite-size at a time?” 32:52 – Vitali: “Find something that works for them. Read the article and start writing code.” He continues this conversation from here on out. 34:03 – Chuck continues to ask questions and add other comments. 34:16 – Vitali chimes-in. 34:38 – Chuck. 34:46 – Vitali piggybacks off of Chuck’s comments. 36:14 – Panelist: Let’s go back to Jest. There is a very common occurrence where we see lots of turn and we see ideas like this has become the dominant or the standard, a lot of people talk about stuff within this community. Then we get this idea that ‘this is the only thing that is happening.’ Transition to jQuery to React to... With that context do you feel like Jest will be a dominant program? Are we going to see Jest used just as common as Mocha and other popular programs? 38:15 – Vitali comments on the panelist’s question. 38:50 – Panelist: New features. Are the features in Jest (over Jasmine, Mocha, etc.) so important that it will drive people to it by itself? 40:30 – Vitali comments on this great question. 40:58 – Panelist asks questions about features about Jest. 41:29 – Vitali talks about this topic. 42:14 – Let’s go to picks! 42:14 – Advertisement. Links: Vitali Zaidman’s Facebook Vitali Zaidman’s Medium Vitali Zaidman’s GitHub Vitali Zaidman’s NPM Vitali Zaidman’s LinkedIn Vitali Zaidman’s Medium Article JavaScript Brutalist Web Design Jasmine Cypress React jQuery Jest Protractor – end to end testing for Angular Test Café Intern Sinon XKCD Sponsors: Kendo UI Sentry Digital Ocean Cache Fly Picks: AJ O’Neal Continuous from last week’s episode: Crossing the Chasm – New Technologies from Niche to General Adaptation. Go Lang Joe Eames Board Game: Rajas of the Ganges Framework Summit Conference in Utah React Conference Aimee Knight Hacker News – “Does Software Understand Complexity” via Michael Feathers Cream City Code Chuck E-Book: How do I get a job? Express VPN Vitali Book: The Square and The Tower: Networks and Power, from the Freemasons to Facebook by Niall Ferguson My article!
Panel: AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight Joe Eames Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Vitali Zaidman In this episode, the panel talks with programmer, Vitali Zaidman, who is working with Software Solutions Company. He researches technologies and starts new projects all the time, and looks at these new technologies within the market. The panel talks about testing JavaScript in 2018 and Jest. Show Topics: 1:32 – Chuck: Let’s talk about testing JavaScript in 2018. 1:53 – Vitali talks about solving problems in JavaScript. 2:46 – Chuck asks Vitali a question. 3:03 – Vitali’s answer. 3:30 – Why Jest? Why not Mocha or these other programs? 3:49 – Jest is the best interruption of what testing should look like and the best practice nowadays. There are different options, they can be better, but Jest has this great support from their community. There are great new features. 4:31 – Chuck to Joe: What are you using for testing nowadays? 4:43 – Joe: I use Angular, primarily. 6:01 – Like life, it’s sometimes easier to use things that make things very valuable. 7:55 – Aimee: I have heard great things about Cypress, but at work we are using another program. 8:22 – Vitali: Check out my article. 8:51 – Aimee: There are too many problems with the program that we use at work. 9:39 – Panelist to Vitali: I read your article, and I am a fan. Why do you pick Test Café over Cypress, and how familiar are you with Cypress? What about Selenium and other programs? 10:12 – Vitali: “Test Café and Cypress are competing head-to-head.” Listen to Vitali’s suggestions and comments per the panelists’ question at this timestamp. 11:25 – Chuck: I see that you use sign-on... 12:29 – Aimee: Can you talk about Puppeteer? It seems promising. 12:45 – Vitali: Yes, Puppeteer is promising. It’s developed by Google and by Chrome. You don’t want to use all of your tests in Puppeteer, because it will be really hard to do in other browsers. 13:26: Panelist: “...5, 6, 7, years ago it was important of any kind of JavaScript testing you had no idea if it worked in one browser and it not necessarily works in another browser. That was 10 years ago. Is multiple browsers testing as important then as it is now? 14:51: Vitali answers the above question. 15:30 – Aimee: If it is more JavaScript heavy then it could possibly cause more problems. 15:56 – Panelist: I agree with this. 16:02 – Vitali continues this conversation with additional comments. 16:17 – Aimee: “I see that Safari is the new Internet Explorer.” 16:23: Chuck: “Yes, you have to know your audience. Are they using older browsers? What is the compatibility?” 17:01 – Vitali: There are issues with the security. Firefox has a feature of tracking protection; something like that. 17:33 – Question to Vitali by Panelist. 17:55 – Vitali answers the question. 18:30 – Panelist makes additional comments. 18:43 – If you use Safari, you reap what you sow. 18:49 – Chuck: I use Chrome on my iPhone. (Aimee does, too.) Sometimes I wind up in Safari by accident. 19:38 – Panelist makes comments. 19:52 – Vitali tells a funny story that relates to this topic. 20:45 – There are too many standards out there. 21:05 – Aimee makes comments. 21:08 – Brutalist Web Design. Some guy has this site – Brutalist Web Design – where he says use basic stuff and stop being so custom. Stop using the web as some crazy platform, and if your site is a website that can be scrolled through, that’s great. It needs to be just enough for people to see your content. 22:16 – Aimee makes additional comments about this topic of Brutalist Web Design. 22:35 – Panelist: I like it when people go out and say things like that. 22:45 – Here is the point, though. There is a difference between a website and a web application. Really the purpose is to read an article. 23:37 – Vitali chimes in. 24:01 – Back to the topic of content on websites. 25:17 – Panelist: Medium is very minimal. Medium doesn’t feel like an application. 26:10 – Is the website easy enough for the user to scroll through and get the content like they want to? 26:19 – Advertisement. 27:22 – See how far off the topic we got? 27:31 – These are my favorite conversations to have. 27:39 – Vitali: Let’s talk about how my article got so popular. It’s an interesting thing, I started researching “testing” for my company. We wanted to implement one of the testing tools. Instead of creating a presentation, I would write first about it in Medium to get feedback from the community as well. It was a great decision, because I got a lot of comments back. I enjoyed the experience, too. Just write about your problem in Medium to see what people say. 28:48 – Panelist: You put a ton of time and energy in this article. There are tons of links. Did you really go through all of those articles? 29:10 – Yes, what are the most permanent tools? I was just reading through a lot of comments and feedback from people. I tested the tools myself, too! 29:37 – Panelist: You broke down the article, and it’s a 22-minute read. 30:09 – Vitali: I wrote the article for my company, and they ad to read it. 30:24 – Panelist: Spending so much time – you probably felt like it was apart of your job. 30:39 – Vitali: I really like creating and writing. It was rally amazing for me and a great experience. I feel like I am talented in this area because I write well and fast. I wanted to express myself. 31:17 – Did you edit and review? 31:23 – Vitali: I wrote it by myself and some friends read it. There were serious mistakes, and that’s okay I am not afraid of mistakes. This way you get feedback. 32:10 – Chuck: “Some people see testing in JavaScript, and people look at this and say there are so much here. Is there a place where people can start, so that way they don’t’ get too overwhelmed? Is there a way to ease into this and take a bite-size at a time?” 32:52 – Vitali: “Find something that works for them. Read the article and start writing code.” He continues this conversation from here on out. 34:03 – Chuck continues to ask questions and add other comments. 34:16 – Vitali chimes-in. 34:38 – Chuck. 34:46 – Vitali piggybacks off of Chuck’s comments. 36:14 – Panelist: Let’s go back to Jest. There is a very common occurrence where we see lots of turn and we see ideas like this has become the dominant or the standard, a lot of people talk about stuff within this community. Then we get this idea that ‘this is the only thing that is happening.’ Transition to jQuery to React to... With that context do you feel like Jest will be a dominant program? Are we going to see Jest used just as common as Mocha and other popular programs? 38:15 – Vitali comments on the panelist’s question. 38:50 – Panelist: New features. Are the features in Jest (over Jasmine, Mocha, etc.) so important that it will drive people to it by itself? 40:30 – Vitali comments on this great question. 40:58 – Panelist asks questions about features about Jest. 41:29 – Vitali talks about this topic. 42:14 – Let’s go to picks! 42:14 – Advertisement. Links: Vitali Zaidman’s Facebook Vitali Zaidman’s Medium Vitali Zaidman’s GitHub Vitali Zaidman’s NPM Vitali Zaidman’s LinkedIn Vitali Zaidman’s Medium Article JavaScript Brutalist Web Design Jasmine Cypress React jQuery Jest Protractor – end to end testing for Angular Test Café Intern Sinon XKCD Sponsors: Kendo UI Sentry Digital Ocean Cache Fly Picks: AJ O’Neal Continuous from last week’s episode: Crossing the Chasm – New Technologies from Niche to General Adaptation. Go Lang Joe Eames Board Game: Rajas of the Ganges Framework Summit Conference in Utah React Conference Aimee Knight Hacker News – “Does Software Understand Complexity” via Michael Feathers Cream City Code Chuck E-Book: How do I get a job? Express VPN Vitali Book: The Square and The Tower: Networks and Power, from the Freemasons to Facebook by Niall Ferguson My article!
Panel: Charles Max Wood John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Ilya Bodrov & Roman Kutanov In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talks with Ilya and Roman. Ilya is a professor, writer, and developer. Roman is a cofounder, and a CEO, of a small startup company. Roman is making an application for small businesses, and he also was a CEO of a Russian startup, too. Check-out today’s episode where the panel talks to the guests about Angular, their startup companies, Test Cafe, among others. Show Topics: 1:20 – Guests’ backgrounds. 2:31 – Chuck: Let’s talk about Angular. In your opinion why is it a good option for startups? 2:55 – Guest: Angular is a very good choice. 3:55 – Guest: If you are not familiar with these concepts or a seasoned developer then it can be difficult and complex to get started. It really depends on what you are trying to build. 4:47 – Chuck: Once you get rolling with it then you run into limitations with it. If you need something simple and fast it’s really nice. 5:08 – Guest: Yes. Trying to find your market niche. Angular is very simple to transfer. Angular has a great community. There are some problems, and we know it. Like the whole mess with versions also... 6:27 – John: Can you elaborate a little? 6:34 – Guest: Yes, if you want to be in the latest technologies...so sometimes you get into a situation when you wan to have some libraries installed and you cannot do that. If you are on one version and this one isn’t supported, then it was a huge mess. 7:43 – Guest adds in more comments. 8:26 – Guest: Currently I have Angular 1. It is too complicated to rewrite. 8:40 – Guest adds comments. 8:57 – John: There would have to be a compelling reason for me to go to Angular 6 at this point. Going from 4 to 5 or 5 to 6 – the one feature – boy that is so amazing. To have it to update your app, and update your code then that’s awesome. If you didn’t know that a command changed then you were in trouble. I agree version control has always been a challenge. 10:20 – Guest: What I like about Angular is the community – it drives it in the right direction. They try to make it more productive and that’s what I like. 10:43 – Chuck: What is it like to run a startup? 10:56 – Guest: I started to write the application. What you see is what you get. I use Angular 1. JavaScript is a heavier language. 14:54 – Guest adds comments. 16:02 – Panelist: What kind of server are you using for your startup? 16:19 – Guest: I have Angular 1 as a backhand. The main application right now is... 17:11 – Panelist: What has the experience been like for people? 17:26 – Guest: Yes... 17:32 – Panelist: What were the benefits of using Angular? 17:40 – Guest: Angular was very helpful. The performance is much better. Important for startups is to know how to write functionality. 18:53 – Panelist: What forms were you using? 19:01 – Guest: Template driven. In Angular 1, I created “what you see is what you get.” 19:52 – Panelist: I am torn about forms. The Reactive side but you move a lot of code that doesn’t feel all that intuitive to me. There are pros and cons of each, but it’s not exactly where I want it to be. I would love to mix the 2 together. Have you dealt with validation in the forms? 21:04 – Digital Ocean’s Advertisement. 21:41 – Guest: I have an editor. I send it to the client. Each input is having some sort of validation. 23:17 – Panelist: How do you make them look good? Yeah, I can do it but how does it not look generic? Do you have a layout? 23:53 – Guest: I throw it into the screen – I try to keep it simple. 25:04 – Panelist: That makes sense. I didn’t know if there was a crossover of complexity. I want a balance between... 25:38 – Panelist: Reactive or Template driven? 25:45 – Guest makes comments. You want to have some custom checking. 26:13 – Panelist: Why was it hard? 26:21 – Guest: Not sure...I experimented a lot. 27:27 – Panelist: I gave up on Reactive. One of the killers for me was the nested components. It seemed to fall apart in my hands. It was extremely difficult. The outer form lost contact to what was going on. That was one of the biggest decisions to walk away from Reactive all together. 28:25 – Guest: Now I remember why I dropped templates. 28:44 – Panelist: Not true, but it’s doable! It’s also easy! You have to know what’s going on. Let’s change the story on this – I don’t want to hijack the podcast. 30:55 – Panelist: It makes your ears stand up. John’s objection was that he was putting a lot of stuff into HTML. 32:43 – Panelist: Every time I see some try to decorate the HTLM – no you don’t have to do that. The rules aren’t there. There are exceptions, of course, but real validation is not screen validation. Interestingly, we have written one for this application. It belongs to Marcel. This isn’t Breeze specific – maybe we an get people to working on it. For sure, even if you didn’t have this framework, you can create one on your own. It turns out that it has more models than you think it does. 34:55 – Panelist: Aside from forms, what mattered in your app? 35:22 – Guest answers the question. 36:01 – Panelist: Lazy Loading. In some apps lazy loading doesn’t make sense in all areas. You don’t always have to use. 36:53 – Guest: Yes, when you work for your employer you sometimes have more time available. When you have a startup it’s a race. Your startup doesn’t have any money. 37:24 – Panelist: You had money? 37:33 – Guest: You have to try new things and makes things right. When users really start really using your application. You can fix everything and make the perfect app or you can learn new things about your users. What problems do that have? 38:50 – Panelist: Question asked. 39:40 – Guest answers question. 40:38 – Protractor. 41:51 – Problems that you/we ran into. 42:21 – Panelist: “We” are using Test Cafe. 42:58 – Cypress. 44:10 – You do not need web driver and... 44:29 – Test Cafe is free. 44:39 – I would pay ten’s of dollars to use a piece of software. It’s a budget buster. 45:15 – Sounds like you guys have a great product there. 45:24 – Thanks for having us. 45:30 – Chuck: Let’s go to picks! 45:39 – Code Badges! 46:13 – Picks! Links: Microsoft’s Azure JavaScript Ruby Angular Test Cafe Cypress Ilya’s GitHub Ilya’s SitePoint Ilya’s Twitter Roman’s Crunchbase Roman’s LinkedIn Roman’s Twitter Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Charles Microsoft Ignite Microsoft Connect Follow me on Twitter! Apple Event John Pipelines – Azure VS Code Ward Test Cafe Ilya Framework Event Roman Michael Seibel’s Building Product MLcourse.AI – October 1st next session starts – it’s free
Panel: AJ O’Neal Aimee Knight Joe Eames Charles Max Wood Special Guests: Vitali Zaidman In this episode, the panel talks with programmer, Vitali Zaidman, who is working with Software Solutions Company. He researches technologies and starts new projects all the time, and looks at these new technologies within the market. The panel talks about testing JavaScript in 2018 and Jest. Show Topics: 1:32 – Chuck: Let’s talk about testing JavaScript in 2018. 1:53 – Vitali talks about solving problems in JavaScript. 2:46 – Chuck asks Vitali a question. 3:03 – Vitali’s answer. 3:30 – Why Jest? Why not Mocha or these other programs? 3:49 – Jest is the best interruption of what testing should look like and the best practice nowadays. There are different options, they can be better, but Jest has this great support from their community. There are great new features. 4:31 – Chuck to Joe: What are you using for testing nowadays? 4:43 – Joe: I use Angular, primarily. 6:01 – Like life, it’s sometimes easier to use things that make things very valuable. 7:55 – Aimee: I have heard great things about Cypress, but at work we are using another program. 8:22 – Vitali: Check out my article. 8:51 – Aimee: There are too many problems with the program that we use at work. 9:39 – Panelist to Vitali: I read your article, and I am a fan. Why do you pick Test Café over Cypress, and how familiar are you with Cypress? What about Selenium and other programs? 10:12 – Vitali: “Test Café and Cypress are competing head-to-head.” Listen to Vitali’s suggestions and comments per the panelists’ question at this timestamp. 11:25 – Chuck: I see that you use sign-on... 12:29 – Aimee: Can you talk about Puppeteer? It seems promising. 12:45 – Vitali: Yes, Puppeteer is promising. It’s developed by Google and by Chrome. You don’t want to use all of your tests in Puppeteer, because it will be really hard to do in other browsers. 13:26: Panelist: “...5, 6, 7, years ago it was important of any kind of JavaScript testing you had no idea if it worked in one browser and it not necessarily works in another browser. That was 10 years ago. Is multiple browsers testing as important then as it is now? 14:51: Vitali answers the above question. 15:30 – Aimee: If it is more JavaScript heavy then it could possibly cause more problems. 15:56 – Panelist: I agree with this. 16:02 – Vitali continues this conversation with additional comments. 16:17 – Aimee: “I see that Safari is the new Internet Explorer.” 16:23: Chuck: “Yes, you have to know your audience. Are they using older browsers? What is the compatibility?” 17:01 – Vitali: There are issues with the security. Firefox has a feature of tracking protection; something like that. 17:33 – Question to Vitali by Panelist. 17:55 – Vitali answers the question. 18:30 – Panelist makes additional comments. 18:43 – If you use Safari, you reap what you sow. 18:49 – Chuck: I use Chrome on my iPhone. (Aimee does, too.) Sometimes I wind up in Safari by accident. 19:38 – Panelist makes comments. 19:52 – Vitali tells a funny story that relates to this topic. 20:45 – There are too many standards out there. 21:05 – Aimee makes comments. 21:08 – Brutalist Web Design. Some guy has this site – Brutalist Web Design – where he says use basic stuff and stop being so custom. Stop using the web as some crazy platform, and if your site is a website that can be scrolled through, that’s great. It needs to be just enough for people to see your content. 22:16 – Aimee makes additional comments about this topic of Brutalist Web Design. 22:35 – Panelist: I like it when people go out and say things like that. 22:45 – Here is the point, though. There is a difference between a website and a web application. Really the purpose is to read an article. 23:37 – Vitali chimes in. 24:01 – Back to the topic of content on websites. 25:17 – Panelist: Medium is very minimal. Medium doesn’t feel like an application. 26:10 – Is the website easy enough for the user to scroll through and get the content like they want to? 26:19 – Advertisement. 27:22 – See how far off the topic we got? 27:31 – These are my favorite conversations to have. 27:39 – Vitali: Let’s talk about how my article got so popular. It’s an interesting thing, I started researching “testing” for my company. We wanted to implement one of the testing tools. Instead of creating a presentation, I would write first about it in Medium to get feedback from the community as well. It was a great decision, because I got a lot of comments back. I enjoyed the experience, too. Just write about your problem in Medium to see what people say. 28:48 – Panelist: You put a ton of time and energy in this article. There are tons of links. Did you really go through all of those articles? 29:10 – Yes, what are the most permanent tools? I was just reading through a lot of comments and feedback from people. I tested the tools myself, too! 29:37 – Panelist: You broke down the article, and it’s a 22-minute read. 30:09 – Vitali: I wrote the article for my company, and they ad to read it. 30:24 – Panelist: Spending so much time – you probably felt like it was apart of your job. 30:39 – Vitali: I really like creating and writing. It was rally amazing for me and a great experience. I feel like I am talented in this area because I write well and fast. I wanted to express myself. 31:17 – Did you edit and review? 31:23 – Vitali: I wrote it by myself and some friends read it. There were serious mistakes, and that’s okay I am not afraid of mistakes. This way you get feedback. 32:10 – Chuck: “Some people see testing in JavaScript, and people look at this and say there are so much here. Is there a place where people can start, so that way they don’t’ get too overwhelmed? Is there a way to ease into this and take a bite-size at a time?” 32:52 – Vitali: “Find something that works for them. Read the article and start writing code.” He continues this conversation from here on out. 34:03 – Chuck continues to ask questions and add other comments. 34:16 – Vitali chimes-in. 34:38 – Chuck. 34:46 – Vitali piggybacks off of Chuck’s comments. 36:14 – Panelist: Let’s go back to Jest. There is a very common occurrence where we see lots of turn and we see ideas like this has become the dominant or the standard, a lot of people talk about stuff within this community. Then we get this idea that ‘this is the only thing that is happening.’ Transition to jQuery to React to... With that context do you feel like Jest will be a dominant program? Are we going to see Jest used just as common as Mocha and other popular programs? 38:15 – Vitali comments on the panelist’s question. 38:50 – Panelist: New features. Are the features in Jest (over Jasmine, Mocha, etc.) so important that it will drive people to it by itself? 40:30 – Vitali comments on this great question. 40:58 – Panelist asks questions about features about Jest. 41:29 – Vitali talks about this topic. 42:14 – Let’s go to picks! 42:14 – Advertisement. Links: Vitali Zaidman’s Facebook Vitali Zaidman’s Medium Vitali Zaidman’s GitHub Vitali Zaidman’s NPM Vitali Zaidman’s LinkedIn Vitali Zaidman’s Medium Article JavaScript Brutalist Web Design Jasmine Cypress React jQuery Jest Protractor – end to end testing for Angular Test Café Intern Sinon XKCD Sponsors: Kendo UI Sentry Digital Ocean Cache Fly Picks: AJ O’Neal Continuous from last week’s episode: Crossing the Chasm – New Technologies from Niche to General Adaptation. Go Lang Joe Eames Board Game: Rajas of the Ganges Framework Summit Conference in Utah React Conference Aimee Knight Hacker News – “Does Software Understand Complexity” via Michael Feathers Cream City Code Chuck E-Book: How do I get a job? Express VPN Vitali Book: The Square and The Tower: Networks and Power, from the Freemasons to Facebook by Niall Ferguson My article!
Panel: Charles Max Wood John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Ilya Bodrov & Roman Kutanov In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talks with Ilya and Roman. Ilya is a professor, writer, and developer. Roman is a cofounder, and a CEO, of a small startup company. Roman is making an application for small businesses, and he also was a CEO of a Russian startup, too. Check-out today’s episode where the panel talks to the guests about Angular, their startup companies, Test Cafe, among others. Show Topics: 1:20 – Guests’ backgrounds. 2:31 – Chuck: Let’s talk about Angular. In your opinion why is it a good option for startups? 2:55 – Guest: Angular is a very good choice. 3:55 – Guest: If you are not familiar with these concepts or a seasoned developer then it can be difficult and complex to get started. It really depends on what you are trying to build. 4:47 – Chuck: Once you get rolling with it then you run into limitations with it. If you need something simple and fast it’s really nice. 5:08 – Guest: Yes. Trying to find your market niche. Angular is very simple to transfer. Angular has a great community. There are some problems, and we know it. Like the whole mess with versions also... 6:27 – John: Can you elaborate a little? 6:34 – Guest: Yes, if you want to be in the latest technologies...so sometimes you get into a situation when you wan to have some libraries installed and you cannot do that. If you are on one version and this one isn’t supported, then it was a huge mess. 7:43 – Guest adds in more comments. 8:26 – Guest: Currently I have Angular 1. It is too complicated to rewrite. 8:40 – Guest adds comments. 8:57 – John: There would have to be a compelling reason for me to go to Angular 6 at this point. Going from 4 to 5 or 5 to 6 – the one feature – boy that is so amazing. To have it to update your app, and update your code then that’s awesome. If you didn’t know that a command changed then you were in trouble. I agree version control has always been a challenge. 10:20 – Guest: What I like about Angular is the community – it drives it in the right direction. They try to make it more productive and that’s what I like. 10:43 – Chuck: What is it like to run a startup? 10:56 – Guest: I started to write the application. What you see is what you get. I use Angular 1. JavaScript is a heavier language. 14:54 – Guest adds comments. 16:02 – Panelist: What kind of server are you using for your startup? 16:19 – Guest: I have Angular 1 as a backhand. The main application right now is... 17:11 – Panelist: What has the experience been like for people? 17:26 – Guest: Yes... 17:32 – Panelist: What were the benefits of using Angular? 17:40 – Guest: Angular was very helpful. The performance is much better. Important for startups is to know how to write functionality. 18:53 – Panelist: What forms were you using? 19:01 – Guest: Template driven. In Angular 1, I created “what you see is what you get.” 19:52 – Panelist: I am torn about forms. The Reactive side but you move a lot of code that doesn’t feel all that intuitive to me. There are pros and cons of each, but it’s not exactly where I want it to be. I would love to mix the 2 together. Have you dealt with validation in the forms? 21:04 – Digital Ocean’s Advertisement. 21:41 – Guest: I have an editor. I send it to the client. Each input is having some sort of validation. 23:17 – Panelist: How do you make them look good? Yeah, I can do it but how does it not look generic? Do you have a layout? 23:53 – Guest: I throw it into the screen – I try to keep it simple. 25:04 – Panelist: That makes sense. I didn’t know if there was a crossover of complexity. I want a balance between... 25:38 – Panelist: Reactive or Template driven? 25:45 – Guest makes comments. You want to have some custom checking. 26:13 – Panelist: Why was it hard? 26:21 – Guest: Not sure...I experimented a lot. 27:27 – Panelist: I gave up on Reactive. One of the killers for me was the nested components. It seemed to fall apart in my hands. It was extremely difficult. The outer form lost contact to what was going on. That was one of the biggest decisions to walk away from Reactive all together. 28:25 – Guest: Now I remember why I dropped templates. 28:44 – Panelist: Not true, but it’s doable! It’s also easy! You have to know what’s going on. Let’s change the story on this – I don’t want to hijack the podcast. 30:55 – Panelist: It makes your ears stand up. John’s objection was that he was putting a lot of stuff into HTML. 32:43 – Panelist: Every time I see some try to decorate the HTLM – no you don’t have to do that. The rules aren’t there. There are exceptions, of course, but real validation is not screen validation. Interestingly, we have written one for this application. It belongs to Marcel. This isn’t Breeze specific – maybe we an get people to working on it. For sure, even if you didn’t have this framework, you can create one on your own. It turns out that it has more models than you think it does. 34:55 – Panelist: Aside from forms, what mattered in your app? 35:22 – Guest answers the question. 36:01 – Panelist: Lazy Loading. In some apps lazy loading doesn’t make sense in all areas. You don’t always have to use. 36:53 – Guest: Yes, when you work for your employer you sometimes have more time available. When you have a startup it’s a race. Your startup doesn’t have any money. 37:24 – Panelist: You had money? 37:33 – Guest: You have to try new things and makes things right. When users really start really using your application. You can fix everything and make the perfect app or you can learn new things about your users. What problems do that have? 38:50 – Panelist: Question asked. 39:40 – Guest answers question. 40:38 – Protractor. 41:51 – Problems that you/we ran into. 42:21 – Panelist: “We” are using Test Cafe. 42:58 – Cypress. 44:10 – You do not need web driver and... 44:29 – Test Cafe is free. 44:39 – I would pay ten’s of dollars to use a piece of software. It’s a budget buster. 45:15 – Sounds like you guys have a great product there. 45:24 – Thanks for having us. 45:30 – Chuck: Let’s go to picks! 45:39 – Code Badges! 46:13 – Picks! Links: Microsoft’s Azure JavaScript Ruby Angular Test Cafe Cypress Ilya’s GitHub Ilya’s SitePoint Ilya’s Twitter Roman’s Crunchbase Roman’s LinkedIn Roman’s Twitter Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Charles Microsoft Ignite Microsoft Connect Follow me on Twitter! Apple Event John Pipelines – Azure VS Code Ward Test Cafe Ilya Framework Event Roman Michael Seibel’s Building Product MLcourse.AI – October 1st next session starts – it’s free
Panel: Charles Max Wood John Papa Ward Bell Special Guests: Ilya Bodrov & Roman Kutanov In this episode, the Adventures in Angular panel talks with Ilya and Roman. Ilya is a professor, writer, and developer. Roman is a cofounder, and a CEO, of a small startup company. Roman is making an application for small businesses, and he also was a CEO of a Russian startup, too. Check-out today’s episode where the panel talks to the guests about Angular, their startup companies, Test Cafe, among others. Show Topics: 1:20 – Guests’ backgrounds. 2:31 – Chuck: Let’s talk about Angular. In your opinion why is it a good option for startups? 2:55 – Guest: Angular is a very good choice. 3:55 – Guest: If you are not familiar with these concepts or a seasoned developer then it can be difficult and complex to get started. It really depends on what you are trying to build. 4:47 – Chuck: Once you get rolling with it then you run into limitations with it. If you need something simple and fast it’s really nice. 5:08 – Guest: Yes. Trying to find your market niche. Angular is very simple to transfer. Angular has a great community. There are some problems, and we know it. Like the whole mess with versions also... 6:27 – John: Can you elaborate a little? 6:34 – Guest: Yes, if you want to be in the latest technologies...so sometimes you get into a situation when you wan to have some libraries installed and you cannot do that. If you are on one version and this one isn’t supported, then it was a huge mess. 7:43 – Guest adds in more comments. 8:26 – Guest: Currently I have Angular 1. It is too complicated to rewrite. 8:40 – Guest adds comments. 8:57 – John: There would have to be a compelling reason for me to go to Angular 6 at this point. Going from 4 to 5 or 5 to 6 – the one feature – boy that is so amazing. To have it to update your app, and update your code then that’s awesome. If you didn’t know that a command changed then you were in trouble. I agree version control has always been a challenge. 10:20 – Guest: What I like about Angular is the community – it drives it in the right direction. They try to make it more productive and that’s what I like. 10:43 – Chuck: What is it like to run a startup? 10:56 – Guest: I started to write the application. What you see is what you get. I use Angular 1. JavaScript is a heavier language. 14:54 – Guest adds comments. 16:02 – Panelist: What kind of server are you using for your startup? 16:19 – Guest: I have Angular 1 as a backhand. The main application right now is... 17:11 – Panelist: What has the experience been like for people? 17:26 – Guest: Yes... 17:32 – Panelist: What were the benefits of using Angular? 17:40 – Guest: Angular was very helpful. The performance is much better. Important for startups is to know how to write functionality. 18:53 – Panelist: What forms were you using? 19:01 – Guest: Template driven. In Angular 1, I created “what you see is what you get.” 19:52 – Panelist: I am torn about forms. The Reactive side but you move a lot of code that doesn’t feel all that intuitive to me. There are pros and cons of each, but it’s not exactly where I want it to be. I would love to mix the 2 together. Have you dealt with validation in the forms? 21:04 – Digital Ocean’s Advertisement. 21:41 – Guest: I have an editor. I send it to the client. Each input is having some sort of validation. 23:17 – Panelist: How do you make them look good? Yeah, I can do it but how does it not look generic? Do you have a layout? 23:53 – Guest: I throw it into the screen – I try to keep it simple. 25:04 – Panelist: That makes sense. I didn’t know if there was a crossover of complexity. I want a balance between... 25:38 – Panelist: Reactive or Template driven? 25:45 – Guest makes comments. You want to have some custom checking. 26:13 – Panelist: Why was it hard? 26:21 – Guest: Not sure...I experimented a lot. 27:27 – Panelist: I gave up on Reactive. One of the killers for me was the nested components. It seemed to fall apart in my hands. It was extremely difficult. The outer form lost contact to what was going on. That was one of the biggest decisions to walk away from Reactive all together. 28:25 – Guest: Now I remember why I dropped templates. 28:44 – Panelist: Not true, but it’s doable! It’s also easy! You have to know what’s going on. Let’s change the story on this – I don’t want to hijack the podcast. 30:55 – Panelist: It makes your ears stand up. John’s objection was that he was putting a lot of stuff into HTML. 32:43 – Panelist: Every time I see some try to decorate the HTLM – no you don’t have to do that. The rules aren’t there. There are exceptions, of course, but real validation is not screen validation. Interestingly, we have written one for this application. It belongs to Marcel. This isn’t Breeze specific – maybe we an get people to working on it. For sure, even if you didn’t have this framework, you can create one on your own. It turns out that it has more models than you think it does. 34:55 – Panelist: Aside from forms, what mattered in your app? 35:22 – Guest answers the question. 36:01 – Panelist: Lazy Loading. In some apps lazy loading doesn’t make sense in all areas. You don’t always have to use. 36:53 – Guest: Yes, when you work for your employer you sometimes have more time available. When you have a startup it’s a race. Your startup doesn’t have any money. 37:24 – Panelist: You had money? 37:33 – Guest: You have to try new things and makes things right. When users really start really using your application. You can fix everything and make the perfect app or you can learn new things about your users. What problems do that have? 38:50 – Panelist: Question asked. 39:40 – Guest answers question. 40:38 – Protractor. 41:51 – Problems that you/we ran into. 42:21 – Panelist: “We” are using Test Cafe. 42:58 – Cypress. 44:10 – You do not need web driver and... 44:29 – Test Cafe is free. 44:39 – I would pay ten’s of dollars to use a piece of software. It’s a budget buster. 45:15 – Sounds like you guys have a great product there. 45:24 – Thanks for having us. 45:30 – Chuck: Let’s go to picks! 45:39 – Code Badges! 46:13 – Picks! Links: Microsoft’s Azure JavaScript Ruby Angular Test Cafe Cypress Ilya’s GitHub Ilya’s SitePoint Ilya’s Twitter Roman’s Crunchbase Roman’s LinkedIn Roman’s Twitter Sponsors: Angular Boot Camp Digital Ocean Get a Coder Job course Picks: Charles Microsoft Ignite Microsoft Connect Follow me on Twitter! Apple Event John Pipelines – Azure VS Code Ward Test Cafe Ilya Framework Event Roman Michael Seibel’s Building Product MLcourse.AI – October 1st next session starts – it’s free
Темы: - Какой стек сейчас в тренде? (относительно тестов) - ES 5,6,7 + Flow vs TypeScript - Компонентное тестирование для Angular or React - WebdriverJS vs WebdriverIO vs Protractor vs NightwatchJS vs others - Что такое CodeseptJS - В чем писать код? VSCode, Webstorm, Notepad+, Atom, VIM? Гости: - Сергей Пирогов - нулячий JS SDET - Рома Маринский - не сумел выучить JS за 3 часа - Александр Хотемской - @xotabu4 JS ниндзя - Никита Галкин - JS архитектор - Михаил Боднарчук - @davert opensource maker. Автор CodeceptJS Отлельное спасибо за монтаж звука Ярославу Пернеровскому Поддержите подкаст www.patreon.com/automation_remarks Присоединяйтесь к нашему Slack каналу http://qaguild-slack.herokuapp.com/ Читайте блог http://automation-remarks.com
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!
AiA 154: Angular Animations with Gil Fink This episode of Adventures in Angular features panelists Ward Bell, Joe Eames, and Charles Max Wood. Special Guest Gil Fink is on the podcast this week to discuss Angular Animations. Tune in to find out more about this topic! [00:01:05] Introduction to Gil Gil is the CEO of Sparxys, which is a small consulting company that he owns in Israel. He has been working for Microsoft for nine years in web development. He wrote the book Pro Single Page Application Development. Currently, he is also speaking in conferences and consulting for companies in Israel. [00:02:06] Introduction to Angular Animation Angular Animation is a model that has been used since Angular 2.0. In the full version it received it’s own model and expanded from Angular core. It is based on Web Animation API and gives a specific language to write Animations declaratively using Typescript in the components. It is also easy to write. Animations are not used to make web pages a “swirling vortex of text.” It instead is something that is used to capture the attention of the user to let them know what is new or where they should pay attention. It gives the user a better overall experience. For example, how to show a user they have a validation error: use a red blinking border. It does not have to be sophisticated or complicated, but can be if that is what is wanted. [00:05:48] Web Animation API Animation mobile in Angular has been available for roughly two years. There is a function called animate which gives the ability for an application to be animated. Web Animation API runs animation for you but is not simple. [00:07:35] What kinds of things do you see people doing with Animations? A common thing for developers is to make Animations make transitions between pages in SPA. Animations also can be used for appearing, or fading in or out elements. More transitions can be made for panel, where they slide from one side to the other, which grabs the attention of the user. SVG and Canvas also are used for Animations by developers. [00:10:33] Starting with Animations Most developers are in a hurry to write their first animations. First, they have to understand animations because understanding concepts are helpful. Reading examples of what CSS 3 and Web Development API are can be a helpful tool. Gil suggests MDM and Mozilla to gain a better understanding. After grasping these concepts, read about how to use the Angular Animation model and how it was created. The Angular Animation model is actually not needed to create Animation in websites – you can use CSS 3 animation and Web Development API. [00:14:15] How do I add Angular Animations to my Angular app? Grab a browser Animation model, which is part of Animation. Create a trigger. This is something that triggers the effect or Animation. Create a state, move from one state to another state using the API. Once you have a trigger, write inside the web component in the templates. Take the trigger, which is a function, and pass the function in component declaration to the Animations property. [00:18:09] When and where should you be using Animations? There needs to be a balance when using Animations. Gil’s rule is not to use experts to understand where to put them. Not everything should be filled with Animations. He prefers to start without them and then add according to specs or expert guidelines. Animations can be distracting and should be there to help the user. [00:21:43] Ideas on How to Use Animations in Applications For example, you can use Animations for models. If a model appears at once, it might shock the user. Instead, make sure that they appear smoothly. It should indicate something is either happening or has happened. If everything happens at once, it may not be as effective for the user. [00:25:25] At what point in the process do you decide this component needs Animation? Gil works with experts in the companies that he works for that have guidelines for the components he creates. Because of this, he creates what they want him to create. [00:28:44] Is there a way of testing these animations are happening? Yes, you can use tools like Protractor, Selenium, and Test IO. Test IO gives the option to record a screen. These tools won’t help understand animations because they can’t test animations. They can check for existents of a class name. You can use a manual tester for quality assurance or have a person check for you. To really see if an effect is working you have to just see it working. Picks Joe: Go see an eclipse Charles: Secrets of the Millionaire Mind by T.Harv Eker You are the Placebo by Dr. Joe Dispenzo Gil: Web Animations Deep Dive with Angular JavaScript Israel Rick and Morty Links www.gilfink.net www.sparxys.com
AiA 154: Angular Animations with Gil Fink This episode of Adventures in Angular features panelists Ward Bell, Joe Eames, and Charles Max Wood. Special Guest Gil Fink is on the podcast this week to discuss Angular Animations. Tune in to find out more about this topic! [00:01:05] Introduction to Gil Gil is the CEO of Sparxys, which is a small consulting company that he owns in Israel. He has been working for Microsoft for nine years in web development. He wrote the book Pro Single Page Application Development. Currently, he is also speaking in conferences and consulting for companies in Israel. [00:02:06] Introduction to Angular Animation Angular Animation is a model that has been used since Angular 2.0. In the full version it received it’s own model and expanded from Angular core. It is based on Web Animation API and gives a specific language to write Animations declaratively using Typescript in the components. It is also easy to write. Animations are not used to make web pages a “swirling vortex of text.” It instead is something that is used to capture the attention of the user to let them know what is new or where they should pay attention. It gives the user a better overall experience. For example, how to show a user they have a validation error: use a red blinking border. It does not have to be sophisticated or complicated, but can be if that is what is wanted. [00:05:48] Web Animation API Animation mobile in Angular has been available for roughly two years. There is a function called animate which gives the ability for an application to be animated. Web Animation API runs animation for you but is not simple. [00:07:35] What kinds of things do you see people doing with Animations? A common thing for developers is to make Animations make transitions between pages in SPA. Animations also can be used for appearing, or fading in or out elements. More transitions can be made for panel, where they slide from one side to the other, which grabs the attention of the user. SVG and Canvas also are used for Animations by developers. [00:10:33] Starting with Animations Most developers are in a hurry to write their first animations. First, they have to understand animations because understanding concepts are helpful. Reading examples of what CSS 3 and Web Development API are can be a helpful tool. Gil suggests MDM and Mozilla to gain a better understanding. After grasping these concepts, read about how to use the Angular Animation model and how it was created. The Angular Animation model is actually not needed to create Animation in websites – you can use CSS 3 animation and Web Development API. [00:14:15] How do I add Angular Animations to my Angular app? Grab a browser Animation model, which is part of Animation. Create a trigger. This is something that triggers the effect or Animation. Create a state, move from one state to another state using the API. Once you have a trigger, write inside the web component in the templates. Take the trigger, which is a function, and pass the function in component declaration to the Animations property. [00:18:09] When and where should you be using Animations? There needs to be a balance when using Animations. Gil’s rule is not to use experts to understand where to put them. Not everything should be filled with Animations. He prefers to start without them and then add according to specs or expert guidelines. Animations can be distracting and should be there to help the user. [00:21:43] Ideas on How to Use Animations in Applications For example, you can use Animations for models. If a model appears at once, it might shock the user. Instead, make sure that they appear smoothly. It should indicate something is either happening or has happened. If everything happens at once, it may not be as effective for the user. [00:25:25] At what point in the process do you decide this component needs Animation? Gil works with experts in the companies that he works for that have guidelines for the components he creates. Because of this, he creates what they want him to create. [00:28:44] Is there a way of testing these animations are happening? Yes, you can use tools like Protractor, Selenium, and Test IO. Test IO gives the option to record a screen. These tools won’t help understand animations because they can’t test animations. They can check for existents of a class name. You can use a manual tester for quality assurance or have a person check for you. To really see if an effect is working you have to just see it working. Picks Joe: Go see an eclipse Charles: Secrets of the Millionaire Mind by T.Harv Eker You are the Placebo by Dr. Joe Dispenzo Gil: Web Animations Deep Dive with Angular JavaScript Israel Rick and Morty Links www.gilfink.net www.sparxys.com
AiA 154: Angular Animations with Gil Fink This episode of Adventures in Angular features panelists Ward Bell, Joe Eames, and Charles Max Wood. Special Guest Gil Fink is on the podcast this week to discuss Angular Animations. Tune in to find out more about this topic! [00:01:05] Introduction to Gil Gil is the CEO of Sparxys, which is a small consulting company that he owns in Israel. He has been working for Microsoft for nine years in web development. He wrote the book Pro Single Page Application Development. Currently, he is also speaking in conferences and consulting for companies in Israel. [00:02:06] Introduction to Angular Animation Angular Animation is a model that has been used since Angular 2.0. In the full version it received it’s own model and expanded from Angular core. It is based on Web Animation API and gives a specific language to write Animations declaratively using Typescript in the components. It is also easy to write. Animations are not used to make web pages a “swirling vortex of text.” It instead is something that is used to capture the attention of the user to let them know what is new or where they should pay attention. It gives the user a better overall experience. For example, how to show a user they have a validation error: use a red blinking border. It does not have to be sophisticated or complicated, but can be if that is what is wanted. [00:05:48] Web Animation API Animation mobile in Angular has been available for roughly two years. There is a function called animate which gives the ability for an application to be animated. Web Animation API runs animation for you but is not simple. [00:07:35] What kinds of things do you see people doing with Animations? A common thing for developers is to make Animations make transitions between pages in SPA. Animations also can be used for appearing, or fading in or out elements. More transitions can be made for panel, where they slide from one side to the other, which grabs the attention of the user. SVG and Canvas also are used for Animations by developers. [00:10:33] Starting with Animations Most developers are in a hurry to write their first animations. First, they have to understand animations because understanding concepts are helpful. Reading examples of what CSS 3 and Web Development API are can be a helpful tool. Gil suggests MDM and Mozilla to gain a better understanding. After grasping these concepts, read about how to use the Angular Animation model and how it was created. The Angular Animation model is actually not needed to create Animation in websites – you can use CSS 3 animation and Web Development API. [00:14:15] How do I add Angular Animations to my Angular app? Grab a browser Animation model, which is part of Animation. Create a trigger. This is something that triggers the effect or Animation. Create a state, move from one state to another state using the API. Once you have a trigger, write inside the web component in the templates. Take the trigger, which is a function, and pass the function in component declaration to the Animations property. [00:18:09] When and where should you be using Animations? There needs to be a balance when using Animations. Gil’s rule is not to use experts to understand where to put them. Not everything should be filled with Animations. He prefers to start without them and then add according to specs or expert guidelines. Animations can be distracting and should be there to help the user. [00:21:43] Ideas on How to Use Animations in Applications For example, you can use Animations for models. If a model appears at once, it might shock the user. Instead, make sure that they appear smoothly. It should indicate something is either happening or has happened. If everything happens at once, it may not be as effective for the user. [00:25:25] At what point in the process do you decide this component needs Animation? Gil works with experts in the companies that he works for that have guidelines for the components he creates. Because of this, he creates what they want him to create. [00:28:44] Is there a way of testing these animations are happening? Yes, you can use tools like Protractor, Selenium, and Test IO. Test IO gives the option to record a screen. These tools won’t help understand animations because they can’t test animations. They can check for existents of a class name. You can use a manual tester for quality assurance or have a person check for you. To really see if an effect is working you have to just see it working. Picks Joe: Go see an eclipse Charles: Secrets of the Millionaire Mind by T.Harv Eker You are the Placebo by Dr. Joe Dispenzo Gil: Web Animations Deep Dive with Angular JavaScript Israel Rick and Morty Links www.gilfink.net www.sparxys.com
Today's question for the [Ask A Protractor] series is..."How Do You Explain The Value Of A Design-Driven Project?" Xavier Garcia @ninzanstudio has agreed to come on and share what he's learned through the years. His background is in architecture and design, and he definitely gives an authoritative, and authentic conclusion to the question. Dig in to this episode today, and be Inspired! #Protractors - Making A Difference!
Many of you have questions about whether to show line items on your proposals, or whether it's best to just give a lump sum. So, Mike Dennison from @DennisonContracting has agreed to come on the show and tell us how he does it and why. This is a fast-paced episode that will educate you and inspire you regardless of how you do your proposals. Whether you do lump sum or line item, the most important thing about being a Protractor is making a difference in your community. And this episode is all about that. Listen today, and be inspired! Read the entire blog post here: http://protractorpodcast.com/ap5 #Protractors - Making A Difference!
It’s so tempting to get on the bandwagon and start ordering stickers, signage, and branded t-shirts to promote your business. Today on the show, Tim Roman from Imperial Builders talks to us about the right way to build a Luxury Brand even if you don’t have a large budget. Although this question was sent in to us to Ask a Protractor, we’ve decided to make this a special show on the Marketing Minute. This is a show you will want to bookmark and listen to over and over again. There are a lot of key elements inside that will help you build a luxury brand and attract high end clients. Inside you’ll discover: ▪ Why branding is JUST as IMPORTANT as building the business itself. ▪ The only 2 things needed to SEPARATE yourself FROM the competition. ▪ The importance of WOWING your clients INSTEAD of spending money on stickers, signs, and branded t-shirts. ▪ Why you should be OVER-COMMUNICATING Everything Everyday! ▪ How “traditional” branding strategies are NOT bringing the same ROI as new technology rolls out, and WHAT you can do about it. ▪ …and much more. If you have a question you would like to send us for the show, please send them to connect@protractorpodcast.com Thank you so much for your support, and for sharing this show with your followers. We greatly appreciate it! Also, you can read the entire show at www.protractorpodcast.com/mm4
Are you still "doing it all?" Have you been thinking about whether you might run a more profitable business by narrowing down your specialty? Well, it turns out that you aren't the only one asking that question. This question was sent in to us to ask on our "Ask a Protractor" series. Mike Segal from @morrisdecks agreed to come on and share his experience, and how narrowing his specialty has greatly increased his profits. You'll be inspired by this episode as you discover: How EFFICIENCY has enabled @morrisdecks to charge more, get jobs done faster, and produce a much better finished product. The different ways you can SPECIALIZE in your existing business. How to make the proposal part of your job QUICKER because you specialize. How Specializing helps the entire team know what to do on each job, and makes training the new guy as EASY as taking a sip of coffee in the morning. Specializing actually INCREASES your reputation and allows you to sell bigger jobs than you've ever dreamed possible. ...and much more! Ok, so specialzing may not be for everyone. But if it's something you're thinking about anyway, then listen to this episode today. And if you just want to be inspired and motivated by listening to a really great guy like Mike Segal... then get this episode and listen to it today. Thank you so much for your support and encouragement of this podcast. If you have a question you would like to hear us address on the [Ask a Protractor] series, please send it to connect@protractorpodcast.com and as always, please share this show with your followers. We greatly appreciate it! Protractors - Making A Difference
関連リンク JSer.info 6周年記念イベントを開催しました - JSer.info JSer.infoの作り方 2017-01-17のJS: Safari Technology Preview Release 21、Protractor 5.0.0 - JSer.info ECMA-262 6th (ES 2015) のモジュールについて (入門編) - ひだまりソケットは壊れない GitHub - nodejs/LTS: Node.js Foundation Long-term Support Working Group Side Effects in JS Promise chains – Gabriel C. Troia – Medium TypedArray or DataView: Understanding byte order ★ 進化するWeb Componentsの今、2016年最新情報 | HTML5Experts.jp WebmentionがW3C勧告に | フロントエンドBlog | ミツエーリンクス Webmention – Plugin Directory — WordPress
За JavaScript поговорили обстоятельно, немного поспорили и даже не уложились в 2 часа. Местами хардкорно, местами может быть и поверхностно - эксперты приглашаются поправлять нас там, где мы были неправы. Гости выпуска: Яков Крамеренко (Киев) - языковой полиглот, специалист в автоматизации тестирования. Последние месяцы серьёзно взялся за JavaScript, руки уже все в бинтах, а на лбу колея от граблей. Юрий Дымов (сделан в Китае) - Архитектор в SAP China. Считает JavaScript хорошим языком, и не краснеет. Юрий занимался тестированием на JS всерьёзку, и нам за всё ответит. Виктор Зозуляк (Краков) - контрибьютер в Angular, любит protractor, но странною любовью. Алексей Виноградов (Дормаген) - просто рад возможности посидеть с умными людьми. Темы выпуска: Что такое JavaScript и чем он не Java (интерпретация, компиляция) Необычные свойства Javascript (однопоточность, асинхронность) Стандарты и “компилируемые в js” языки ES5 ES6 ~ ES7 TypeScript Flow Babel list of languages that compile to javascript IDE WebStorm/IntelliJ IDEA Enterprize Atom Sublime Visual Studio Code Сравнение скорости редакторов (в плане задержек при наборе кода): Server-Side JS vs Frontend JS Зачем тестировать на JavaScript Известные фреймворки (Jasmine, Mocha, Chai, etc.) их особенности https://habrahabr.ru/post/314978/ Веб-тестирование на JavaScript. Зачем? WebdriverJS, Webdriver.io, Protractor, Nightwatch.js, Angular Protractor for Angular applications Protractor for Angular-like applications :) Protractor for non-Angular applications Selenium-webdriver Проблемы Наши промисы - говно, надо бы всё поменять С новыми модными методами тоже хреново работает Неплохой доклад о современном webdriverjs based тестировании, о тех проблемах что были, и что делать что бы с ними бороться… API тестирование на JavaScript. Зачем?
Have you ever wondered around Youtube, looking for inspiration? I did a few years ago, and I stumbled upon(1) an activity called Zentangle. It is an art form that really suits everybody. Let me explain. A 'tangle' is a pattern that doesn't have to look like anything in particular(2); it is a simple pattern, repeated over the paper. It's similar to 'doodling' which is when a person draws any random shapes, connected or not, as a way of relaxing. There are no expectations of drawing a particular object or scene, just shapes. Well, a Zentangle is a collection of several different patterns on a small paper (usually 3.5 inches squared). The 'Zen' part of this practice is that a person is completely free to choose the patterns, style, and combinations, and to simply enjoy the process. There is no stress involved, no expectations of artistry or perfection. In fact, it has been proven that tangling reduces stress, lowers blood pressure, and increases focus and happiness. Amazing! It seems to work with the human brain in a similar way to yoga: relaxation, freedom from competition, and focus. It has actually surprised me how this kind of organized doodling improves my mood. A booklet called 'Beginning Zentangle' lists why it is so popular: 1. It is unplanned, so its results surprise you. 2. Without up or down - can be viewed and drawn from any orientation. 3. Abstract nonrepresentative art, a collection of patterns - not a drawing of something. 4. Can be drawn with either hand. 5. Small enough to be drawn in 15 minutes. 6. Portable. 7. Not limited by technology. All you need is a paper and a pencil or pen. (3) So, if you think about it, you can tangle in most places in order to relax and enjoy the moment. I'm going to slip a pad of paper and some fine black pens into my handbag so I can tangle with Zen whenever I feel like it. 1. 'To stumble upon' means 'to come upon' or 'to find by chance'. The verb stumble means to trip (over), so the phrase implies that a person finds something by actually falling over it. What a great picture! We often use this phrase when we explain that we have found something interesting in a book or a newspaper. a. In a medical journal, I stumbled upon a remedy for my skin problem. b. In the park, we stumbled upon a hidden path that led to a cottage next to the river. 2. I use the word 'particular' twice in this podcast. Once as an adjective 'a particular object', and once in the phrase 'in particular. This can be placed at the beginning, middle, or end of a sentence, but is most commonly placed at the end. It singles out a noun as being special or focused on rather than others. a. They loved to meet in cafes on Saturday mornings, in Cafe Mela in particular. b. The theme of literature in schools in the month of October is Autumn, and Halloween in particular. 3. The list quoted from 'Beginning Zentangle' is written in incomplete sentences. This is fine to do when you are writing a list of basic information, or sharing facts; sometimes we will omit the verb or the article. a. The advantages of exercising regularly: 1. Improves mood. 2. Speeds metabolism. 3. Less need to diet. 4. Body repairs itself more quickly. b. Math class supply list: 1. Large eraser. 2. Packet of #2 pencils 3. Protractor and ruler. 4. No need to buy graph paper, - supplied by teacher.
Angular Remote Conf and React Remote Conf 03:18 - Brian Mann Introduction Twitter GitHub 03:33 - Cypress.io 04:09 - Selenium 08:56 - Cypress vs Selenium 16:54 - Similarities: Cypress and Protractor 18:22 - Mocking API Data 20:40 - Getting Started with Cypress and The Migration Process 21:54 - Testing 30:31 - Handling Data on the Backend 34:16 - What’s coming next in Cypress?
Angular Remote Conf and React Remote Conf 03:18 - Brian Mann Introduction Twitter GitHub 03:33 - Cypress.io 04:09 - Selenium 08:56 - Cypress vs Selenium 16:54 - Similarities: Cypress and Protractor 18:22 - Mocking API Data 20:40 - Getting Started with Cypress and The Migration Process 21:54 - Testing 30:31 - Handling Data on the Backend 34:16 - What’s coming next in Cypress?
Angular Remote Conf and React Remote Conf 03:18 - Brian Mann Introduction Twitter GitHub 03:33 - Cypress.io 04:09 - Selenium 08:56 - Cypress vs Selenium 16:54 - Similarities: Cypress and Protractor 18:22 - Mocking API Data 20:40 - Getting Started with Cypress and The Migration Process 21:54 - Testing 30:31 - Handling Data on the Backend 34:16 - What’s coming next in Cypress?
Join us as we look into our crystal ball to see what is coming in the next major release of the popular Angular framework. Kenneth & Len are joined by Mike Geyser from BBD to talk about the upcoming Angular 2 release. Mike has been a web developer for many years, having uploaded websites to Geocities back in the day! The web has changed a lot since the good old days of "single page websites" and "under construction" GIF's, and in this show we look at Angular 2. This major new version has stirred a lot of controversy since it was announced in 2014, with fears around the new tooling, the initial lack of an upgrade path and the adoption of TypeScript as the default language for writing in. Headline features include writing isomorphic applications, easier "native" mobile apps and greater performance than its predecessor. Mike does a great job of showing us what is coming down the pipe. Follow Mike online: - https://twitter.com/mikegeyser Here are some resources mentioned during the show: * Angular 2 - https://angular.io/ * Angular CLI - https://cli.angular.io/ * Angular Universal - https://universal.angular.io/ * NativeScript - https://www.nativescript.org/ * TypeScript - https://www.typescriptlang.org/ * Isomorphic JavaScript - http://isomorphic.net/ * Web Components - http://webcomponents.org/ * Redux - http://redux.js.org/index.html * React Native - https://facebook.github.io/react-native/ * Meteor - https://www.meteor.com/ * Upgrading apps with ngUpgrade - http://blog.thoughtram.io/angular/2015/10/24/upgrading-apps-to-angular-2-using-ngupgrade.html * Babel - https://babeljs.io/ * Protractor - http://www.protractortest.org/ And finally our picks Kenneth: * JavaScript Jabber 209 TypeScript with Anders Hejlsberg - https://devchat.tv/js-jabber/209-jsj-typescript-with-anders-hejlsberg Len: * Falcor - https://netflix.github.io/falcor/starter/what-is-falcor.html Mike: * Tern - http://ternjs.net/ * The ng-show: Angular 2 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aSFfLVxT5vA Thanks for listening! Stay in touch: * Socialize - https://twitter.com/zadevchat & http://facebook.com/ZADevChat/ * Suggestions and feedback - https://github.com/zadevchat/ping * Subscribe and rate in iTunes - http://bit.ly/zadevchat-itunes
Angular 2 testing using Protractor, Karma and more withJulie Ralph Panelists: PatrickJS, Ed Conolly Guests: Julie RalphOutline Background Testing landscape Firstquestion...Jasmine or Mocha? j/k Seriously, though, give us a layout of the testinglandscape. What are the major tools/libraries involved in testing an Angular 2web app? When do you use Karma vs Protractor How has the landscape evolved over theyears? What is new with the latest Karma and Protractor? New world of JavaScript How doyou deal with the build process and testing? Webpackor System offer advantages for testing? Are thereare special features in Karma or Protractor for Angular 2? Testing as a discipline How doyou get developers to actually write tests? Why don’tdevelopers write tests? How doyou maintain discipline over time? Generalguidelines for testing to follow? Anythoughts or experiences with BDD / CucumberJS and protractor? Testing strategy When doyou use unit tests vs integration tests vs e2e (and server vs browser) MockedAPIs vs Real APIs, should my protractor tests really be e2e? Other frameworks What doyou think of AVA? https://github.com/sindresorhus/ava Future What doesthe future hold for testing?Tips & Picks PatrickJS Zone.js0.6.x https://github.com/angular/zone.js/ How toTest RxJS http://staltz.com/how-to-debug-rxjs-code.html Chaos Monkey http://techblog.netflix.com/2012/07/chaos-monkey-released-into-wild.html Gremlins.jshttps://github.com/marmelab/gremlins.js Jeff Whelpley StraightOutta Compton With latest TypeScript, you may not need Webpack https://medium.com/@vivainio/with-latest-typescript-you-may-not-need-webpack-417d2ef0e773#.2z0xbjndi Ng2 testseed https://github.com/juliemr/ng2-test-seed Web Workers and Service Works by Gleb https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4axZ3D75Llg&list=UU_DH6Z_K_3JRgOdDnwHLrLw Ed Instanttest feedback in your IDE - http://wallabyjs.com/ ConfigurableAPI responses - https://github.com/wongatech/angular-multimocks AngularConnectScholarships / CFP Julie Angularmaterial is alpha: https://github.com/angular/material2 Niftyproject website from Seattle Times: http://projects.seattletimes.com/2016/elwha/ Juliepromises to update ng2-test-seed today :) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/angularair/support
Summary Oren Rubin (@Shexman) goes through why it's important to not only test the back-end code of our applications but also to test our Front End code, the integration points, and the full user experience. Oren also goes through reasons why you would test, what should be tested, best practices, and when you should not test. O'Reilly Media Partner Discounts The Web Platform Podcast is a proud O'Reilly Media Partner. As such, one of the benefits we provide our listeners are special discounts such as 50% off ebooks and 40% in printed material. This includes but is not limited to books on the web technologies. Your discount code is PCBW so head over to http://www.oreilly.com/ right now to get all your favorite tech books at much lower prices. Your Latest O'Reilly Discounts 20% Discount to FluentConf http://conferences.oreilly.com/fluent-javascript-html-ca/ Call for proposals is done, registration is open, and O'Reilly Fluent Conf is back in just a few months. Fluent, The Web Platform conference will be held in San Francisco, CA on March 7-10 2016. Get practical Training in JavaScript, HTML5, CSS and the latest web development technologies and frameworks. The Web Platform Podcast listeners receive a 20% discount when registering for the conference. Make sure you use the promotional code PCWPP20 to receive your discount. Free eBook: Data-Informed Product Design http://www.oreilly.com/pub/cpc/1220 Designers must understand user needs to create any product. But what type of data should you look at? In her new book, Data-Informed Product Design, Pamela Pavliscak outlines a way to use data of all kinds to understand the relationship between people and technology. Generally speaking, big data is quantitative; it gives you the what, where, and when, while “thick data” provides the qualitative perspective—the how and the why. Up until now, there hasn't been much information on how to combine quantitative big data with qualitative thick data. That's where this report can help. If you're involved in any aspect of product design, this is indispensable reading. It's useful, and we're pleased to offer it to you, for free! Get the free ebook now. Resources Unit Tests QUnit - Basic unit tesing https://qunitjs.com/ Sinon - Unit test spies, stubs and mocks library http://sinonjs.org/ Jasmine - all-in-one unit testing http://jasmine.github.io/ Karma - front end test runner http://karma-runner.github.io/0.13/index.html istanbul - https://github.com/gotwarlost/istanbul End to end testing Selenium WebDriver - http://www.seleniumhq.org/ Protractor - https://angular.github.io/protractor/#/ phantomjs - headless WebKit “browesr” with JS API http://phantomjs.org/ Testim.io - a new to write end-to-end tests using dynamic locators https://testim.io/ mocha - https://mochajs.org/ Integrated tests are a scam - http://blog.thecodewhisperer.com/2010/10/16/integrated-tests-are-a-scam/ Selenium Grid - https://github.com/SeleniumHQ/selenium/wiki/Grid2 Visual validations Open source: Huxley, Wraith Commercial: applitools, percy.io Sauce Labs - Browser in the cloud service provider https://saucelabs.com/ Panelists Erik Isaksen (@eisaksen) - Front End Development Lead at Deloitte Digital & Google Developer Expert in Web Technologies Justin Ribeiro (@justinribeiro) - Wearables & HTML5 Google Developer Expert & Partner at Stickman Ventures or random person who keeps finding our Hangout link
02:43 - Oren Rubin Introduction Twitter GitHub LinkedIn TESTIM.IO 05:43 - Testing Unit Testing End-to-end Testing Acceptance Testing Functional Testing Performance Testing 18:18 - Page Object(s) Locators 27:10 - Protractor & Selenium Zombie 32:06 - Checking UI (Screenshots) 37:04 - End-to-end > Full Coverage? 40:03 - When should you start testing? 42:21 - Cucumber 45:39 - Debugging Picks Paul Ford: 10 Timeframes (Jamison) Kishi Bashi - “In Fantasia” (Jamison) Matt Zabriskie (Jamison) http-backend-proxy (Aimee) repl.it (Aimee) React.js Training with Michael Jackson and Ryan Florence (Joe) React Rally (Joe) AngularConnect (Joe) ng-conf (Joe) Ruby Remote Conf Videos (Chuck) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck) 15 Minute Podcast Listener chat with Charles Wood (Chuck) Dave Haeffner: Elemental Selenium (Oren) CSS Secrets by Lea Verou (Oren) Cloudinary (Oren)
02:43 - Oren Rubin Introduction Twitter GitHub LinkedIn TESTIM.IO 05:43 - Testing Unit Testing End-to-end Testing Acceptance Testing Functional Testing Performance Testing 18:18 - Page Object(s) Locators 27:10 - Protractor & Selenium Zombie 32:06 - Checking UI (Screenshots) 37:04 - End-to-end > Full Coverage? 40:03 - When should you start testing? 42:21 - Cucumber 45:39 - Debugging Picks Paul Ford: 10 Timeframes (Jamison) Kishi Bashi - “In Fantasia” (Jamison) Matt Zabriskie (Jamison) http-backend-proxy (Aimee) repl.it (Aimee) React.js Training with Michael Jackson and Ryan Florence (Joe) React Rally (Joe) AngularConnect (Joe) ng-conf (Joe) Ruby Remote Conf Videos (Chuck) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck) 15 Minute Podcast Listener chat with Charles Wood (Chuck) Dave Haeffner: Elemental Selenium (Oren) CSS Secrets by Lea Verou (Oren) Cloudinary (Oren)
02:43 - Oren Rubin Introduction Twitter GitHub LinkedIn TESTIM.IO 05:43 - Testing Unit Testing End-to-end Testing Acceptance Testing Functional Testing Performance Testing 18:18 - Page Object(s) Locators 27:10 - Protractor & Selenium Zombie 32:06 - Checking UI (Screenshots) 37:04 - End-to-end > Full Coverage? 40:03 - When should you start testing? 42:21 - Cucumber 45:39 - Debugging Picks Paul Ford: 10 Timeframes (Jamison) Kishi Bashi - “In Fantasia” (Jamison) Matt Zabriskie (Jamison) http-backend-proxy (Aimee) repl.it (Aimee) React.js Training with Michael Jackson and Ryan Florence (Joe) React Rally (Joe) AngularConnect (Joe) ng-conf (Joe) Ruby Remote Conf Videos (Chuck) Angular Remote Conf (Chuck) 15 Minute Podcast Listener chat with Charles Wood (Chuck) Dave Haeffner: Elemental Selenium (Oren) CSS Secrets by Lea Verou (Oren) Cloudinary (Oren)
Angular Accessibility - Accessibility on the web is something that helps all users (whether they have disabilities or not). Marcy Sutton is passionate about accessibility and will join us to give some tips and tricks to making accessible web applications with Angular. Guests: Marcy Sutton Panelists: Aimee Knight and Jeff Whelpley Picks/Tips: Marcy - Accessibility Wins, Progress Towards an Engineering Discipline of Software by Mary Shaw (super awesome speaker at Gotocon Amsterdam), Notes on Client-Rendered Accessibility, Frozen banana ice cream (because summer), Development tips: Protractor accessibility plugin, My JSConf talk on automated accessibility testing, Chrome accessibility developer tools Kent - cloc and Live a balanced life Aimee - Color Blindness App Test, Learn Functional Programming Jeff - Universal JavaScript Angular Air is a video podcast all about Angular hosted by egghead.io instructor Kent C. Dodds. Please visit the Angular Air website (http://angular-air.com) to see upcoming and past episodes. Also be sure to follow Angular Air on Twitter and Google+ to stay up to date with future episodes. Also, all episodes are on the YouTube channel as well. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/angularair/support
01:20 - Julie Ralph Introduction Twitter GitHub Google (Seattle Office) Angular Team Protractor 02:47 - Finding Angular and the Team 04:50 - End-to-End Testing WebDriver 08:46 - Making Scripting Easier with Protractor 10:57 - Grabbing By Model 11:27 - Framework Support Jasmine Mocha Cucumber 12:59 - What You Need to Know to Work with Protractor Node.js Debugging Knowledge 14:14 - Data Hydration for Tests 16:10 - Using Mock Modules 17:52 - When Should People Start Using Protractor? 23:21 - Using Protractor for Performance Testing benchpress 25:06 - Writing End-to-End Tests 29:28 - Testing Stories The PageObject Pattern [YouTube] Jim Lavin: Using Page Objects in AngularJS Protractor Authentication User Scripts Red Flag: Logic in Your End-to-End Tests 32:05 - Protractor 2.0?! 33:33 - Support for Angular 2 See Also [YouTube] Julie Ralph: End to End Angular Testing with Protractor Picks bardjs (John) [Pluralsight] Play by Play: John Papa and Ward Bell (John) The revolution that could change the way your child is taught (Ward) Teach Like a Champion: 49 Techniques that Put Students on the Path to College (K-12) by Doug Lemov (Ward) Colt Express (Joe) ng-book (Chuck) DevTools: State Of The Union 2015 by Addy Osmani (Julie) Digital Spring Cleaning (Julie)
01:20 - Julie Ralph Introduction Twitter GitHub Google (Seattle Office) Angular Team Protractor 02:47 - Finding Angular and the Team 04:50 - End-to-End Testing WebDriver 08:46 - Making Scripting Easier with Protractor 10:57 - Grabbing By Model 11:27 - Framework Support Jasmine Mocha Cucumber 12:59 - What You Need to Know to Work with Protractor Node.js Debugging Knowledge 14:14 - Data Hydration for Tests 16:10 - Using Mock Modules 17:52 - When Should People Start Using Protractor? 23:21 - Using Protractor for Performance Testing benchpress 25:06 - Writing End-to-End Tests 29:28 - Testing Stories The PageObject Pattern [YouTube] Jim Lavin: Using Page Objects in AngularJS Protractor Authentication User Scripts Red Flag: Logic in Your End-to-End Tests 32:05 - Protractor 2.0?! 33:33 - Support for Angular 2 See Also [YouTube] Julie Ralph: End to End Angular Testing with Protractor Picks bardjs (John) [Pluralsight] Play by Play: John Papa and Ward Bell (John) The revolution that could change the way your child is taught (Ward) Teach Like a Champion: 49 Techniques that Put Students on the Path to College (K-12) by Doug Lemov (Ward) Colt Express (Joe) ng-book (Chuck) DevTools: State Of The Union 2015 by Addy Osmani (Julie) Digital Spring Cleaning (Julie)
01:20 - Julie Ralph Introduction Twitter GitHub Google (Seattle Office) Angular Team Protractor 02:47 - Finding Angular and the Team 04:50 - End-to-End Testing WebDriver 08:46 - Making Scripting Easier with Protractor 10:57 - Grabbing By Model 11:27 - Framework Support Jasmine Mocha Cucumber 12:59 - What You Need to Know to Work with Protractor Node.js Debugging Knowledge 14:14 - Data Hydration for Tests 16:10 - Using Mock Modules 17:52 - When Should People Start Using Protractor? 23:21 - Using Protractor for Performance Testing benchpress 25:06 - Writing End-to-End Tests 29:28 - Testing Stories The PageObject Pattern [YouTube] Jim Lavin: Using Page Objects in AngularJS Protractor Authentication User Scripts Red Flag: Logic in Your End-to-End Tests 32:05 - Protractor 2.0?! 33:33 - Support for Angular 2 See Also [YouTube] Julie Ralph: End to End Angular Testing with Protractor Picks bardjs (John) [Pluralsight] Play by Play: John Papa and Ward Bell (John) The revolution that could change the way your child is taught (Ward) Teach Like a Champion: 49 Techniques that Put Students on the Path to College (K-12) by Doug Lemov (Ward) Colt Express (Joe) ng-book (Chuck) DevTools: State Of The Union 2015 by Addy Osmani (Julie) Digital Spring Cleaning (Julie)
Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 00:58 - Andres Dominguez Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Google: New York 01:47 - protractor Selenium WebDriver WebDriverJs JavaScript Jabber Episode #106: Protractor with Julie Ralph Julie Ralph 03:50 - elementor [YouTube] Elementor, an improved element explorer for protractor elementexplorer [YouTube] Protractor's element explorer IDEs WebStorm IntelliJ IDEA 09:54 - Use Outside of Angular 10:37 - The Name: “Elementor” 11:11 - Conception => Production Writing Tests Text Editors Sublime vim 12:42 - Implementing Elementor / Workflow TDD (Test-driven Development) 14:39 - Testing a Non-Angular Website 15:31 - Installing the Elementor Chrome Extention Google Developer Tools 18:45 - Running in Emacs 19:47 - Plugins (egghead.io) sjump ddescriber 20:47 - Debugging Picks Open Space Events and Conferences (Joe) Miracles and Massacres: True and Untold Stories of the Making of America by Glenn Beck (Chuck) DevDocs (Andres)
Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 00:58 - Andres Dominguez Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Google: New York 01:47 - protractor Selenium WebDriver WebDriverJs JavaScript Jabber Episode #106: Protractor with Julie Ralph Julie Ralph 03:50 - elementor [YouTube] Elementor, an improved element explorer for protractor elementexplorer [YouTube] Protractor's element explorer IDEs WebStorm IntelliJ IDEA 09:54 - Use Outside of Angular 10:37 - The Name: “Elementor” 11:11 - Conception => Production Writing Tests Text Editors Sublime vim 12:42 - Implementing Elementor / Workflow TDD (Test-driven Development) 14:39 - Testing a Non-Angular Website 15:31 - Installing the Elementor Chrome Extention Google Developer Tools 18:45 - Running in Emacs 19:47 - Plugins (egghead.io) sjump ddescriber 20:47 - Debugging Picks Open Space Events and Conferences (Joe) Miracles and Massacres: True and Untold Stories of the Making of America by Glenn Beck (Chuck) DevDocs (Andres)
Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 00:58 - Andres Dominguez Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Google: New York 01:47 - protractor Selenium WebDriver WebDriverJs JavaScript Jabber Episode #106: Protractor with Julie Ralph Julie Ralph 03:50 - elementor [YouTube] Elementor, an improved element explorer for protractor elementexplorer [YouTube] Protractor's element explorer IDEs WebStorm IntelliJ IDEA 09:54 - Use Outside of Angular 10:37 - The Name: “Elementor” 11:11 - Conception => Production Writing Tests Text Editors Sublime vim 12:42 - Implementing Elementor / Workflow TDD (Test-driven Development) 14:39 - Testing a Non-Angular Website 15:31 - Installing the Elementor Chrome Extention Google Developer Tools 18:45 - Running in Emacs 19:47 - Plugins (egghead.io) sjump ddescriber 20:47 - Debugging Picks Open Space Events and Conferences (Joe) Miracles and Massacres: True and Untold Stories of the Making of America by Glenn Beck (Chuck) DevDocs (Andres)
In this episode, we talk about Waitr and Protractor, two Jasmine WebDriver APIs, Angular 2.0 surfaces, we talk about Apple's self-driving car, and discuss a bunch of new Amazon AWS features including Cloud Trail for Route53 and health checks. Stay to the end for our silly Apple Car jokes. The post DevNews #95 – We talk about new AWS services, Angular JS 2.0 surfaces, and the Apple Car is a thing? appeared first on Chariot Solutions.
In this episode Jeremy Thake talks to Karthik Ramamoorthy about writing Office 365 apps with AngularJS and testing them with Protractor. Weekly updates Introduction to the Access panel – Microsoft Azure Using SharePoint Permissions to manage Access to SQL data by Scot Hillier This is how I think Autohosted Apps for Office 365 and SharePoint should work by Andrew Connell 6 hours of free training by Steve Walker and Vesa Juvenon online at Microsoft Virtual Academy Show notes Jumpstart AngularJS app development for O365 & E2E testing using Protractor http://spbreed.github.io/index.html#/presentable https://github.com/spbreed/spangularapp http://angular.github.io/protractor/#/tutorial http://jasmine.github.io/1.3/introduction.html http://mochajs.org/ http://docs.seleniumhq.org/download/ Got questions or comments about the show? Join the O365 Dev Podcast on the Office 365 Technical Network. The podcast RSS has been submitted to all the stores and marketplaces but takes time, please add directly with the RSS http://feeds.feedburner.com/Office365DeveloperPodcast. About Karthik Karthik Ramamoorthy works a senior consultant for Greystone Solutions, a Boston based Microsoft Gold Competency partner. He is originally from Coimbatore, India. He has been working in SharePoint Server for the past seven years and is involved in wide range of projects including SharePoint installation automation, integrating SharePoint with LOB applications such as SAP, CRM, Documentum, performance tuning SharePoint farms, deploying .NET based workloads on Azure. Karthik is enthusiastic about App model and client side development ever since the release of SharePoint 2013 RTM. He is also passionate about adopting test driven development patterns and bringing open source technologies inside Office 365 and Azure App development workspace. You can find Karthik blogging at SPBREED’S BLOG and tweeting at @spbreed. About the host Jeremy is a newly appointed technical product manager at Microsoft responsible for the Visual Studio Developer story for Office 365 development. Previously he worked at AvePoint Inc., a large ISV, as the chief architect shipping two apps to the Office Store. He has been heavily involved in the SharePoint community since 2006 and was awarded the SharePoint MVP award four years in a row before retiring the title to move to Microsoft. You can find Jeremy blogging at www.jeremythake.com and tweeting at @jthake.
The panelists talk to Julie Ralph about AngularJS's protractor.
The panelists talk to Julie Ralph about AngularJS's protractor.
The panelists talk to Julie Ralph about AngularJS's protractor.
In this Episode Kevin interview with Ari to talk about AngularJS. Ari is the author of ng-book, The Complete Book on AngularJS, Riding Rails with AngularJS and D3 on AngularJS. Also he is the CTO and Founder at FullStack LLC. Beehive BackboneJS EmberJS KnockoutJS AngularJS Jasmine Karma Protractor China Velocity Golang Erlang Clojure Node Passport ng-newsletter ng-book Tiny Habits Building the 2048 Game in AngularJS LeanPub pluralsight Egghead Fullstack Edu Alfred App 1Password Audio Hijack Pro Special Guest: Ari.
It's a dark world out there. A lot of stuff going on. There are things you wouldn't understand. Things you couldn't understand. Things you ...shouldn't understand. This week, the men of The Spoon get to the bottom of an uncomfortably long list of those things, dancing around the ephemera of the fringes and questioning every answer. Also, a hefty dose of TV nerdery, and yet another cast member's medical malady. Music by Randy Burns, Jennifer Trynin, and Eytan Mirsky.
e. Measure angles using a protractor or angle ruler.
e. Measure angles using a protractor or angle ruler.
e. Measure angles using a protractor or angle ruler.
To design a Colonial American Day program, I recommend offering six stations with one or more adult volunteers manning each station. Each station would have a different theme and each activity at that station should take 15-20 minutes to complete. Teachers at Hayes Elementary School in Las Vegas, Nevada, led by Shauna Harris, designed a program to match this description. You can view their 90-minute rotation plan here and the accompanying Pilgrim's Passport (a sheet for student reflection on at each station) here. Alternatively, teachers may choose to dedicate one day to an individual station's theme, doing all the activities from that station in a whole class or small group setting throughout a single day.Station possibilities include art, cornhusk dolls, science, games, cooking, and household chores/trades. Examples of centers for each of these stations appear below and are also available as a downloadable document. The downloadable document is editable and includes needed materials for 72 participants (12 per station at one time). Pictures of these activities taken on September 16, 2009 at Green Valley High School as part of the Clark County School District Teaching American History Grant appear below.___________________________________________Cornhusk Dolls Place a tarp on the floor and place a large tub of water in the middle to pre-soak cornhusks. Materials: Version: Corn husks (enough for each participant to have about 10 husks), Ball of string or twine, Scissors, Large tub filled with water (place corn husks in water before class), Rubberband ball, Tarp Use the instructions available at http://www.teachersfirst.com/summer/cornhusk.htmHere is a video of third graders in Ms. Graham's classroom at Staton Elementary School making cornhusk dolls.Video___________________________________________ScienceSundials Use instructions from King, D. (1997). Colonial Days: Discover the Past with Fun Projects, Games, Activities, and Recipes (American Kids in History Series). Wiley, John & Sons Inc., page 9. Materials: Ream of cardstock (any light color), Scissors, Black felt tip pens, Rulers, Protractor, Scotch tapeMeasuring Tree Height Use instructions from King, D. (1997). Colonial Days: Discover the Past with Fun Projects, Games, Activities, and Recipes (American Kids in History Series). Wiley, John & Sons Inc., page 22. Materials: Ball of string, Scissors, Measuring Tape/Yardstick, Masking tapeMaking Compasses Use instructions from Carlson, L. (1997). Colonial Kids: An Activity Guide to Life in the New World (A Kid's Guide series). Chicago Review Press, page 16. Materials: Small magnet, Nails (long), Pie pans (filled with water), Wine corksCandle Making Place melted paraffin into clean cans placed on beverage warmers (to keep wax melted). Have students wrap the end of an approximately 12" string to one end of a pencil or popsicle stick and wet the string to give it some weight. Have students dip their string into the wax and then immediately into the water. Repeat this process until the candle forms to a reasonable size. Use hands to massage the candle into the proper shape. Materials: Ball of white string, Popsicle sticks, Household paraffin wax, Scissors, Beverage warmers, Cans (fill half with water), Aluminum foil (to cover beverage warmers to keep them clean)Here is a video of third graders in Ms. Graham's classroom at Staton Elementary School making candles.Video___________________________________________GamesJacks Use instructions from King, D. (1997). Colonial Days: Discover the Past with Fun Projects, Games, Activities, and Recipes (American Kids in History Series). Wiley, John & Sons Inc., page 39. Materials: Jacks, Small rubber ballsJackstraws Use instructions from King, D. (1997). Colonial Days: Discover the Past with Fun Projects, Games, Activities, and Recipes (American Kids in History Series). Wiley, John & Sons Inc., page 94. Materials: Handfuls of coffee stirring strawsHoop RollUse instructions from Carlson, L. (1997). Colonial Kids: An Activity Guide to Life in the New World (A Kid's Guide series). Chicago Review Press, page 114. Materials: Hula hoops, Wooden sticks (1 per hoop)Marbles Use instructions from http://www.1771.org/cd_marbles.htm. Materials: Strings arranged and taped into a 24" circle, MarblesStick Toss Use instructions from King, D. (1997). Colonial Days: Discover the Past with Fun Projects, Games, Activities, and Recipes (American Kids in History Series). Wiley, John & Sons Inc., page 80. Materials: Box of toothpicks (for betting), popsicle sticks, fine-tip red, yellow, and black marking pens, instruction sheet (see JPG below or link to the PPT version).___________________________________________Household Chores/TradesSewing a PocketUse instructions from Broida, M. (2003). Projects About Colonial Life (Hands-on History). Benchmark, page 40. Materials: Felt, Needles, Thimbles, Thread, Needle threader, Pincushion, Scissors, BeadsSailor Stitches Use instructions from Carlson, L. (1997). Colonial Kids: An Activity Guide to Life in the New World (A Kid's Guide series). Chicago Review Press, page 13. Materials: Ball of rope, Thick dowelRag Rug Use instructions from Carlson, L. (1997). Colonial Kids: An Activity Guide to Life in the New World (A Kid's Guide series). Chicago Review Press, page 28. Materials: Needle, Thread, Pincushion, Thimble, Rags, Safety pin, Fabric glueFishnet Making Use instructions from Broida, M. (2003). Projects About Colonial Life (Hands-on History). Benchmark, page 10. Materials: Twine, Chair, Scissors, Dowel___________________________________________ArtQuill Writing Use instructions from http://www.ehow.com/how_4762757_write-quill-pen.html. Materials: Feather quills, Ink, Wipes, Paper, Tide Stick, Cups (filled with water), Newspaper, The Mayflower CompactHere is a video of third graders in Ms. Graham's classroom at Staton Elementary School writing with quill pens.VideoStenciled Notecards Use instructions from King, D. (1997). Colonial Days: Discover the Past with Fun Projects, Games, Activities, and Recipes (American Kids in History Series). Wiley, John & Sons Inc., page 100. Materials: White card stock, Painters tape, Pencils, Power towels, Stencil brushes, Paint tub (filled with water), Paint, Small paper plates, Self-healing mat, Exacto-knife, NewspaperPaper Quilling Use instructions from Carlson, L. (1997). Colonial Kids: An Activity Guide to Life in the New World (A Kid's Guide series). Chicago Review Press, page 99. Materials: Coffee stirrers, Toothpicks, Scissors, Paper cutter, White glue, Wrapping paper, Book on quillingStitch a Sampler Use instructions from Carlson, L. (1997). Colonial Kids: An Activity Guide to Life in the New World (A Kid's Guide series). Chicago Review Press, page 109. Materials: Colored pencils, Graph paper, Cross-stitch fabric, Embroidery skeins, Embroidery hoops, Scissors, Embroidery needlesKnit a Patch Use instructions from Carlson, L. (1997). Colonial Kids: An Activity Guide to Life in the New World (A Kid's Guide series). Chicago Review Press, page 65. Materials: Yarn, Pencils or knitting needles___________________________________________CookingGingersnaps Use instructions from Carlson, L. (1997). Colonial Kids: An Activity Guide to Life in the New World (A Kid's Guide series). Chicago Review Press, page 41. Materials: Parchment paper, Brown sugar, Butter, Eggs, Molasses, Ground cloves, Flour, Sugar, Baking soda, Wipes, Wooden spoon, Toaster oven, Oven mitts, Hot pad, Spatula, Plates, Mixing bowl, Cookie sheets (small for toaster oven), Measuring cup, Teaspoon, Cinnamon, Ground ginger, Knife, Paper towelsButter Use instructions from http://www.ehow.com/how_4691483_own-butter-home.html. Materials: Heavy whipping cream, Paper towels, Plastic shaking jar, Strainer, Pitcher filled with water, Bucket, Bowl, Plastic wrap, KnifeHere is a video of third graders in Ms. Graham's classroom at Staton Elementary School making butter.VideoBerry Red Ink Use instructions from King, D. (1997). Colonial Days: Discover the Past with Fun Projects, Games, Activities, and Recipes (American Kids in History Series). Wiley, John & Sons Inc., page 55. Materials: Strawberries, Strainer, Large spoon, Small bowl, Paper cups, Salt, Measuring spoon, Vinegar