Look at you, so nice and sweet
It’s a meme champ, nobody’s being serious, you don’t have to light your candle of reconciliation
Look at you, so nice and sweet
It’s a meme champ, nobody’s being serious, you don’t have to light your candle of reconciliation


Not a very cool or useful project, is it?
I code in JS, so I’m something of a C dev myself!
designers using programmers to code ui: 🤯


You just said “shut up nerd” but without it being funny


They’re still a thing in 2025?


There is a reason why European countries stopped building wonders, while other parts of the world keep on undergoing tremendous construction efforts.
The reason is slavery.
You seem to enjoy overengineering your code, don’t you?
I have to say that I may be a bit ignorant, because I’m mostly engaged in greenfield projects with very tiny devteams and I always keep my dependencies count low as possible
Thank you for pointing this out, that’s very valuable to keep in mind
It does take a lot of space for devs, but personally I find that absolutely irrelevant, because it’s your end user’s experience that really matters, and - as a dev - you are most likely to have a much better rig and internet connection than your average Joe.
Which is of very little importance in most cases, because modern bundlers incorporate treeshaking in order to filter out all the unused code when you’re building a production application
Edit: okay well appearently that’s controversial for some reason


When I was a junior, I was given an entire front-end app to develop entirely on my own with very little guidance from the team-lead. It was some ridiculously bad code, especially since it was my first time working with React with basically zero preparation.
Few months later, project is delivered, I get some time to read docs and guides before starting the next one. Since I was learning theory on what I would practise earlier, I was digesting it extremely fast and it helped me patch up all the holes in my thinking and learn how things should actually be done.
Soon after the next project came and it was definitely much more of a smooth ride. The code was alright and even the early decisions I made were pretty sustainable much later. It was another project I was working all alone, then some people joined in and I was teaching them, but I would always guide them too much and they weren’t growing very fast.
Even after a few months, these people were not ready or willing to work independently, which was my personal failure as a mentor. That’s what really assured me that people should be given a lot of space to properly grow.
My whole career is me working on increasingly larger projects with decreasing assistance. And it’s extremely effective. 4 years in the field and I just became a software architect.


Is that even a joke or a fact statement at this point?
I don’t get it
Stop saying that, it has it’s uses /;_;\
Just use the paint, internet person
Two times. One after another. He did it two times specifically to assure you that he’s not joking. And he knew you would still excuse him.


sure thing, buddy


Are you roleplaying a guy from 1933 or what?
HAHA! SEXPRESSION! GET IT?