• Breaking News

    Thursday, December 16, 2021

    Why is stackoverflow.com community so harsh? web developers

    Why is stackoverflow.com community so harsh? web developers


    Why is stackoverflow.com community so harsh?

    Posted: 15 Dec 2021 09:14 PM PST

    They'd say horrible things everytime I tried to create a post, and I'm completely aware that sometimes my post needs more clarity, or my post is a duplication, but the reason my post was a duplicate was because the original post's solution wasn't working for me... Also, while my posts might be simple to answer at times, please keep in mind that I am a newbie in programming and stackoverflow... I enjoy stackoverflow since it has benefited many programmers, including myself, but please don't be too harsh :( In the comments, you are free to say whatever you want. I'll also mention that I'm going to work on improving my answers and questions on stackoverflow. I hope you understand what I'm saying, and thank you very much!

    submitted by /u/imjustnoob45
    [link] [comments]

    Datalist, the pure HTML typeahead you didn't know about

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 08:39 AM PST

    What level projects on frontend mentor should be on a jr Front end web dev portfolio?

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 09:11 AM PST

    I'm going to be making my portfolio soon so I went on front end mentor to get some ideas and some of the higher level ones seemed very hard. For example I would really struggle to get the JS down for a memory game

    submitted by /u/AQ5SQ
    [link] [comments]

    Feels like I forgot everything I knew

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 09:02 AM PST

    If you're active on this subreddit, you might have noticed my posts about regarding my internship that's sucking the life out of me. If not, I won't get into A LOT of details, but all I want to say is that ever since I started this internship, I haven't been myself.

    I am incredibly stressed, I am panicky all the time, and since the job is remote, I don't have much help. I am constantly given tasks that I don't know how to do and when I ask for help I either get a response after 3 days, or I get some generic response that I could have googled myself. I started feeling insecure, feeling that everything I do is wrong and I've developed some sort of fear of writing code. I haven't written much code for the past 6-7 days or so, I've been watching mainly tutorials about stuff that I don't know. So today, after many days of not doing anything in particular and stressing the fuck out, I was assigned to another project and let me tell you - I opened VS code and couldn't type a single line of code. I suddenly felt like my brain stopped responding, I couldn't remember how to code at all. Tried centering a div and ended up copy-pasting the solution from stack overflow. I tried really hard to get stuff done but I literally needed to google every single thing I needed to do. After 2 hours of struggling, I gave up.

    I wasn't like this. One week ago I completed an entire project from scratch. Pretty complex, I would say. And now I have to google how to center a div. I don't understand what happened to me. I was looking through lines of code that I've written myself and I can't make sense out of it anymore. I don't even understand CSS selectors anymore, I don't understand which property applies to which element etc. I know it sounds silly and I know some people will not believe me when I say these, but I promise you it's exactly the way I feel. No exaggeration. In one week I went from creating a project from scratch to not understanding or being able to read code anymore, let alone write code myself.

    I feel like I've lost my memory. Is this caused by stress? Will I get my knowledge back? Has anyone been through this? I would really appreciate some insight.

    submitted by /u/FeatheredDrake
    [link] [comments]

    Is it normal that the size on disk uses 10x the size of the actual files? Folder has 2 small projects stored in an external NVME SSD on exFAT format.

    Posted: 15 Dec 2021 10:46 PM PST

    what is an optimal strategy to implement internationalization?

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 08:03 AM PST

    Hello

    i'm working on a react project that will have 2 display languages, i decided from the start to write all needed texts (mostly static content) for the website in english and then implement whatever is needed to get the second language into the site by the end of the project..

    after some googling seems the npm i18n package is the most popular choice for this endeavor but at such a late stage in the project development i will have to rewrite almost all the components to use the i18n components (according to some yt tutorial) which is unfeasible..

    my second thought is to store all needed texts in both languages (again they are static) in the DB and make api calls from the uppermost parent component in a single "page" and just pass the needed texts as props to the components that require it..and this sounds a little crazy

    what do you guys think? what should i do? is there a better way to implement internationalization at a late stage in development?

    submitted by /u/-KuroOkami-
    [link] [comments]

    What is log4j Security Issue? - Invezza Technologies

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 01:50 AM PST

    Deep-copying in JavaScript using structuredClone

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 10:46 AM PST

    Are there any modern UI Frameworks for building traditional Multi Page Applications?

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 04:04 AM PST

    Every Javascript UI Framework I know of is for building Single Page Applications (SPAs) but I haven't found a single one to build traditional MPAs like we usually do with PHP. The only way I currently see to build that kind of website is via vanilla HTML and JS plus maybe something like jQuery to make the JS part a bit simpler. Is that how it works?

    submitted by /u/zerik100
    [link] [comments]

    First Decent Project - Document Sharing Platform

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 09:55 AM PST

    Bootstrapping a UI component library

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 09:31 AM PST

    Next + Shopify enough?

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 09:25 AM PST

    Hi all,

    I am looking for my first web developer role (i already know HTML, CSS, javascript, react, and next fundamentals) and want to get into Shopify development but I am a bit lost.

    I see lots of people saying using something like Next for frontend and vanilla Shopify as a Headless CMS is more than enough to make a good eCommerce site and get a job, and I see other people say that you need hydrogen. Do I really have to learn hydrogen to get a job as an eCommerce developer?

    TLDR: Do I need to know Shopify hydrogen or is vanilla Shopify enough?

    submitted by /u/therealcoolpup
    [link] [comments]

    GraphQL API for Metrics and Analytics: now you can query data warehouses and dozens of SQL-enabled databases with GraphQL

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 08:43 AM PST

    Do you know of any resources to learn about HTTP Requests & SSL Certs?

    Posted: 15 Dec 2021 10:55 PM PST

    Hey everyone, I've been learning more about frontend/fullstack development so I've run into CORS issues as well as HTTP error codes. While I've learned I've also seen stuff about SSL certificates, but I don't really know what they do or how they work. I wanted to know if anyone has links to resources I can use to learn about these. Also do you consider these topics to be important for frontend or are these more backend problems?

    submitted by /u/Lncr1259
    [link] [comments]

    Improving the New York Times’ line wrap balancer

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 06:13 AM PST

    Pico.css • Minimal CSS Framework for semantic HTML

    Posted: 16 Dec 2021 06:12 AM PST

    No comments:

    Post a Comment