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I'm participating in Advent of Code for the first time and learned a lot about parsing inputs as external files this week.
Related to Advent of Code, I learned that in Javascipt
.split()
takes an optional second argument of a number of splits to make. It came in handy for the Day 2 problem.And I watched Ania's Make Your Oen API video. I've done a few projects with backend APIs but the refresher on building a very simple one was inspiring and helpful.
Awesome! Also, Ania has great content.
I learned about Behavior-driven development and was able to use Cypress and Cucumber to write and execute test scenarios.
Noice!
I tried my hands on seo performance optimization in nuxtjs and was able to get a lighthouse score of 100 in SEO and 91 on performance.
Nice!
.
.
I learnt how use
struct
andclass
in Swift. Yeah, very beginner levelNice!
I recently started reading Practical Machine Learning in JavaScript I'm really excited about it.
Nice! I have the book, but haven't started it yet. I have some others to read first, but will probably get to this during the holidays.
I learned to build a website with HTML and CSS. Finishing up today.
That's awesome! 🔥
Accessibility. Even though the UI frameworks that we use tackle most of the accessibility problems, we still have a lot to do.
I wrote an article about this
I launched my #100DaysOfKotlin learning journey - and in the process I learned about mkdocs (static site generator using markdown), discovered their material-mkdocs theme and became obsessed with it.
End result:
Learned enough to get a site running that is perfect for my #100Days journey!
See: kotlin.fyi
I really want to write a post on mkdocs now and I hope to do that soon. But for the curious - here are the links (and yes it deploys to GitHub pages easily - and can be setup with Github Actions to auto build/deploy - though I haven't done that yet)
Mkdocs: mkdocs.org/
Material Theme: squidfunk.github.io/mkdocs-material/
Bonus: It's really built for effective documentation requirements so if you understand and love folder hierarchies for organizing information, and Markdown for formatting pages - then you will 😍 it too!
I really hate asynchronous programming, but I spent today making a set of generic C# classes that handle API requests/responses that I can reuse in future programs so I don't have to do this again.
I learned about APIs and used them in my project for a hackathon.
I got an intro to pair programming with Martin Fowler's article. I'm excited to practice more now that I know the theory.