From Geek and Poke.
Category: Programming
A big part of my work has to do with code. I’ve worked as system administrator – installing, patching, and configuring someone else’s code. I’ve worked as independent programmer, writing code on my own. I also programmed as part of the team. And on top of that, I worked as Team Leader and Project Manager, where I had to interact a lot with programmers. Programming world on its own is as huge as the universe. There is always something to learn. When I find something worthy or something that I understand enough to write about, I share it in this category.
The F5 key is not a build process. It’s a quick an…
The F5 key is not a build process. It’s a quick and dirty substitute. If that’s how you build your software, I regret that I have to be the one to tell you this, but your project is not based on solid software engineering practices.
Read the Docs – create, host, and browse documentation
Read the Docs – create, host, and browse documentation
Read the Docs hosts documentation, making it fully searchable and easy to find. You can import your docs using any major version control system, including Mercurial, Git, Subversion, and Bazaar. We support webhooks so your docs get built when you commit code. There’s also support for versioning so you can build docs from tags and branches of your code in your repository.
Slim PHP framework
FEATURES
- Powerful router
- Standard and custom HTTP methods
- Route parameters with wildcards and conditions
- Route redirect, halt, and pass
- Route middleware
- Template rendering with custom views
- Flash messages
- Secure cookies with AES-256 encryption
- HTTP caching
- Logging with custom log writers
- Error handling and debugging
- Middleware and hook architecture
- Simple configuration
The absolute worst testers you can possibly have a…
The absolute worst testers you can possibly have are developers. They’re better than nothing. But barely. Even a mediocre tester will make your application better, and by proxy, encourage you to become a better developer. The very best testers will drag you, kicking and screaming if necessary, across the bug-bar threshold. Professional testers force you to become a better developer. Sometimes it’s painful. But in a good way, like a heavy workout.