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    I made 'teen' pages. It's like 'man' pages, but for HTTP status codes web developers

    I made 'teen' pages. It's like 'man' pages, but for HTTP status codes web developers


    I made 'teen' pages. It's like 'man' pages, but for HTTP status codes

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 05:00 AM PDT

    The div that look different in every browser

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 04:57 AM PDT

    Coding Your Own Discord Bot - Discord.js

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 01:02 AM PDT

    What are the must-read articles about Web Development?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 01:46 PM PDT

    Hi fellow Web Devs,

    I am following some bloggers but feel like I'm missing a lot of interesting stuff that is posted all around the web. That's why I would like to know what your must-read articles for web development are?
    Could be from last week but also from years ago as long as the content is still applicable.

    Primarily asking about general topics, best practices, coding style or maybe ethics and teamwork.
    But could also be about HTML, CSS, PHP, JavaScript or even Python, SQL or Go.
    Or about Contious Integration / Deployment, Security or Performance Tuning.

    Thanks in advance!

    submitted by /u/theKovah
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    I built this with vanilla JS. The views are handled with an observer pattern setup. The server is slow with assets, but otherwise I'm pretty happy with how it turned out.

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 09:48 AM PDT

    If you don't have a degree and you're just starting in web dev, is it better to focus on the front-end or the back-end?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 05:01 AM PDT

    I recall reading somewhere (can't find the thread) that because you have to tackle with business logic in the back-end, companies tend to be more selective in the candidates for backend positions compared to front-end jobs. I'm asking if such a thing holds some truth in it, because I'm also really interested to work with backend logic. I haven't decided if I'll do PHP, Python, C# or something else because of this question. I mean, no matter how much I would like starting like that, the reality of the job market might contradict my love.

    Edit: I just realized that I'm completely ignoring fullstack openings which by the looks of a few queries on indeed and SO jobs are quite a lot. At first I was "junior AND fullstack? Seriously?" well, seriously.

    submitted by /u/Shogil
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    Browsh: the modern, text-based browser

    Posted: 08 Jul 2018 07:28 PM PDT

    A Dev’s Thoughts: My Most Used Git Commands – Steffen Pedersen – Medium

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 12:19 PM PDT

    Recover Archives from a Chinese website ?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 10:28 AM PDT

    Hi,

    My company has a Chinese (.cn) version of their website, which has gotten some words changed over the last few weeks. Unfortunately the consulting firm in charge of that haven't backed up their work, but we need to know what was the exact wording before the changes were made. I've looked on the Wayback Machine and this site was not archived there. Is there another way, maybe even hosted in China, to recover a cached version of a website ? For instance, does Baidu have a capacity similar to Google's in that regard ?

    Thanks !

    submitted by /u/lekevoid
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    Deploy your bare minimum chrome extension. Didn't know it was this easy!

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 02:45 AM PDT

    New data viz project illustrates 12 common mistakes people make when visualizing data

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 04:25 PM PDT

    Does anyone have any experience with older versions of jQuery Datatables?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 12:33 PM PDT

    I've been trying to figure out how to implement a filter button for a table. It uses Datatables 1.9x and is receiving the data from a Rails API. I've had a hell of a time looking through the legacy docs to find the best practices for this sort of thing, but I haven't gotten as far as figuring out where to put the filter function. If anyone could point me in the right direction, I would really appreciate it.

    submitted by /u/ern19
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    Applying to junior/entry-level developer jobs out of state?

    Posted: 08 Jul 2018 10:45 PM PDT

    After I complete/polish up my portfolio within the next few months, I plan to start applying to front-end/web developer positions. Ultimately, I want to/need to get away from where I am now. I am actually located in the Silicon Valley (prime location I know), but it is just too expensive here for me, I've lived here my whole life and the competition is over the top (compared to other places). Not only that, but it's time for me to change up my environment, as I am way to comfortable here and I am starting to slack on my goals. I know that this is really the best route for me to take in order to move out (of my parents house).

    Now, for those of you that have done this - how did you go about? Location wise, I am really keeping my options open. I do have family on the east coast, but I am not limiting my search to just that area. Really anywhere, location-wise. I'd rather go to a place that is on the rise for up and coming developers and that has a relatively cheap living expensive (although compared to the Bay Area, that's really anywhere else).

    How should I go about this? Just apply to places on Indeed and CL? I was maybe thinking about trying out services like Triplebyte. I've also come across websites such as www.jrdevjobs.com but I am not sure how good they are. What other websites are out there, or recruiters?

    Would it be easier to find an opportunity/job first and then make the move? Will living out of state deter my chances of getting said job, even if I tell them I am 100% willing to relocate (with or without their help). Or make the move to a location and then look for a job - which is obviously hard since you have to have enough saved income to last you while you are unemployed.

    Really just looking for any sort of advice regarding this topic.

    submitted by /u/jester070993
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    How do you prevent old, out-of-date projects from killing your motivation as a developer?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 11:46 AM PDT

    I've been a freelance developer for about 4 years now, and I love it. But when my clients need work done on old websites (that I built) it kills my motivation.

    I'm improving so quickly as a developer that even projects I did 3 months ago seem super shitty—and it often feels easier to just redo the entire thing from scratch.

    Of course, no client has a budget for that, but it's also really hard to work with 10-20 different projects.

    Are there any ways to make long-term maintenance suck less?

    submitted by /u/saocyan
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    So I got the interview, but I have no idea what position I applied for. What should I do?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 03:29 PM PDT

    Hey gang, I'm looking for some advice.

    Like the title says, I applied for a job (apparently) at a very large company in the United States. They happen to have a branch about 40 minutes south of me, so it feels like a job I may have applied for on Indeed or one of those sites. I was looking for a new job about 6 months ago, but have since started a new job.

    The hiring manager emailed me and said " we think your skills are a perfect match for some job openings" based off my resume.

    It's extremely possible that I applied to this company without taking some notes down about the position, but I have to say I'm at a loss. How do I best prepare for this interview? My resume reflects that I know Node JS, PHP, React, Vue and some frameworks like Wordpress and Laravel. Just brush up on my fundamentals?

    TL;DR: My plan is to just wing it and try to nail the interview based purely off what's on my resume.

    EDIT:

    Also, I've never interviewed at a company this large. What are some good links for preparing for a corporate technical position? I imagine I applied for a web developer position!

    submitted by /u/hiphophipp0
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    Is there any reason NOT to use Wordpress?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 11:06 AM PDT

    Hi guys,

    I have a client who has a $500 budget and he's an acquaintance of mine. He wants just a basic website for his business. I'm a computer science student and my HTML and CSS skills are decent. I'm not sure how long this project would take to code but I know wordpress would be much faster.

    Basically without rambling on, is there any reason to hand code a website like this anymore?

    Thanks in advance everyone.

    submitted by /u/Serendipitylol
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    Is MVC gone from front end?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 06:56 AM PDT

    What modern front end frameworks still use MVC? React for example uses only "V." Angular 2+ can be argued that it really isn't MVC. Nobody really uses backbone or the deprecated Angular anymore that were actually MVC.

    submitted by /u/dotobird
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    Can anyone recommend an open source Image Annotations scripts? Someone that can add this like arrows, text, etc as shown.

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 01:24 PM PDT

    A Tailwind CSS Cheat Sheet

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 03:28 AM PDT

    Has anyone deconstructed Melanie Daveid's scrolljacking "work" section?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 12:42 PM PDT

    http://melaniedaveid.com/

    I'd love to know how it was coded to keep the work items scrolling while keeping the section heading fixed on the left.

    submitted by /u/eacrataes
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    (Question) How often would a client really need a from scratch website vs WordPress?

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 12:39 PM PDT

    Hey Everyone,

    I am currently learning JS, Ruby, and Rails. I have created a couple WP sites before for friends businesses and a non-profit. I understand that creating from scratch is much more customizable and if you are a good developer can be much better than a WP site. However how many people actually create from scratch sites for customers?

    To me it seems that a WP site is not only easier and more cost effective but can produce a better end-result than most devs, at least on the front-end.

    I guess the distinction for me is that WP is more websites (blogs, small business) and e-commerce (in an out of the box fashion). Development is really trending towards more Webapp based if that makes. Am I wrong?

    submitted by /u/Serraphiim
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    Screencast - Showcase of Scrapy Visual Web Scraper Prototype

    Posted: 09 Jul 2018 12:02 AM PDT

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