It was a very challenging month!
We started a Community of Practice at my work. It’s very exciting to share and learn things with other colleagues. We’re doing some katas and lighting talks. It’s only the beginning, but I think we can improve a lot with these meetings.
I’m also reading some books. I’m reading two of them (Sandro Mancuso’s The Software Craftsman and Growing Object Oriented Software) with other people. It’s very interesting to read a book with some other people. When talking about the book, you can see another point of view about the same chapters, and ask or share thoughts.
I also started the Intro to TDD by J.BRains.
I read all these posts during July:
- Why null references are a bad idea
- El resurgir de la programación funcional
- Pattern matching
- Why should you use standard http methods while designing rest apis
- Dejé de leer
- Finding time to become a better developer
- Comments explain why not what and 2 more rules on writing good comments
- My experience with pair programming
- 5 step recipe everything you need to know for staying up to date in java
- You can’t learn everything
- Declarative pipeline with Jenkins
- Mastering programming
- My three tips for maintaining fitness and a healthy lifestyle as a software developer
- Unit testing is simple
- Seven useful programming habits
- Making and taking babysteps
- How to get started with public speaking
- Code reviews
- Git branching done right with gitflow: improving code quality with code reviews
- The problem with heroes in software development
- Brief introduction to salts in hashing
- A quick introduction to git
- 12 tips for making the best use of your time
- pbpaste-pbcopy in mac os x or terminal clipboard fun
- How to choose an open source project to contribute to
- Pragmatic Functional Programming
- You changed the code, you didn’t refactor the code
- How to supercharge your learning of new technologies
- The benefits of having a craftsman in your team
- Optional: anti-patterns
- Builder design pattern
- Volver a estudiar
- My journey towards software craftsmanship
- Open source: 9 steps to my first feature contribution in Babel
- Speed in software development
- Blogging driven learning
- Git: command line vs guis
- No excuses write unit tests
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