Git is a version control system that makes it easier to track changes to files. With git, you can figure out:
- What changed
- Who changed it
- Why it changed
Empathy and having an empathetic viewpoint is one of those abilities that, once you learn, becomes indispensable. It helps with personal, social, and work relationships. It can contribute to the successful navigation of interpersonal conflict, can contribute to the accurate understanding of others and can enhance your communication skills among other things. I grew up with two psychologists for parents, so maybe I had a bit of help with learning empathy through the way the raised me but I think it is hard to say that for certain. At any rate, I think it has been an ability that has most assuredly been developed over the years. It helps me with communication and conflict resolution, which are both important skills for every day life at work and home.
Mathieu Turpault's article, while more about design, absolutely sums this up. Empathy can help a softw
We had to create a simple web app that would let you time an activity of your choosing, and then log it. There were three main categories: exercise, meditate, and study that you could click on. The user could then add a more exact text description of their own choosing of the activity and input the number of minutes and seconds that they would like to do the activity for. After clicking on a button to start the activity, a countdown timer would appear. After the time was complete, the user could then log the activity on the "past activity list" on the left side of the page.
I generally like to do my best to be as flexible as possible in order to make the working experience as smooth as it can be.
Do you know how to problem solve? Well I sure as shit don't.
But I'm getting there.
Today I had an exercise in problem solving from start to finish with an assigned partner at my coding bootcamp. We were given a series of javascript exercises to choose from and we chose this:
Write a function that takes an Array of Booleans and Strings. This function should return a String - the first string that appears in the array that was passed in.
Example:
I am a young professional who has started the journey towards becoming a software engineer. I am ambitious, goal-oriented, self-driven and disciplined, and I use these qualities among others to help push me along towards my career goals.
I have had a varied background, from working in various service industry positions to corporate enterprise software sales to English Teaching in a German kindergarten. Since getting my undergrad degree, I have pushed myself to hone my professional skills in order to have a fullfilling career, but I had problems finding the career that fit me and that I fit into. I started teaching myself how to code while working full time, but I could only get 10 to 20 hours of study a week on top of my full time work and normal life. I decided to take the leap and attend Turing bootcamp. It has been a scary but highly rewarding leap, and has made me realize how possible it is to learn new complex skills.
The difference between a library can be explained using a car analogy. Both Mercedez and Audi are cars, but when you open
them up, you see how differently they are made. They could be said to have different "frameworks" because their structures,
organization, and parts are so different from each other. Their frameworks control the way they are made. They may use common
materials (libraries) like tie arms, head gaskets, engine blocks, dashboards and the like that are made by other manufacturing
companies or they could use their own.
Frameworks in software solve organizational and structural challenges by setting standards that your code must follow,
and then calling that code in certain places. The control is shifted away from your own written code and given over to
the framework. On the other hand, using a library still leaves the control with you and your code. A library just gives you
extra "vocabulary" to use within your code. E
This gist contains a short assignment I'd like everyone to complete before our formal lesson. The prework involves reading some of the React Router documentation, and will allow us to keep the lesson more hands on.
# DTR: Define the Relationship | |
Use this template when conducting DTR with your project partners. *It's recommended that you copy/paste this template into your own gist each time you conduct a DTR to take notes on the conversation.* | |
### Guiding Questions to Define The Relationship: | |
* What are each of our learning goals for this project? What drives us in this project? | |
* What is your collaboration style? How do you feel about pair programming vs. divide-and-conquer approaches? | |
* How do you communicate best? How do you appreciate receiving communication from others? | |
* How would you describe your work style? |