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Sumant Kanala kanalasumant

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I bundled these up into groups and wrote some thoughts about why I ask them!

If these helped you, I'd love to hear about it!! I'm on twitter @vcarl_ or send me an email carl.vitullo@gmail.com

Onboarding and the workplace

https://blog.vcarl.com/interview-questions-onboarding-workplace/

  • How long will it take to deploy my first change? To become productive? To understand the codebase?
  • What kind of equipment will I be provided? Will the company pay/reimburse me if I want something specific?
@Kruemelkatze
Kruemelkatze / ! Theming Ant Design with Sass and Webpack.md
Last active June 4, 2024 21:55
Theming Ant Design with Sass and Webpack

Theming Ant Design with Sass and Webpack

This is a solution on how to theme/customize Ant Design (which is written in Less) with Sass and webpack. Ant itself offers two solutions and a related article on theming, but these are only applicable if you use Less, the antd-init boilerplate or dva-cli.

What this solution offers:

  • use a single sass-file to customize (no duplicate variables for your project and Ant)
  • hot reload compatibility
  • no dependencies on outdated npm modules
  • easy integration with your existing webpack setup (webpack 3+ tested)
@kanalasumant
kanalasumant / array_iteration_thoughts.md
Created January 20, 2018 00:45 — forked from ljharb/array_iteration_thoughts.md
Array iteration methods summarized

While attempting to explain JavaScript's reduce method on arrays, conceptually, I came up with the following - hopefully it's helpful; happy to tweak it if anyone has suggestions.

Intro

JavaScript Arrays have lots of built in methods on their prototype. Some of them mutate - ie, they change the underlying array in-place. Luckily, most of them do not - they instead return an entirely distinct array. Since arrays are conceptually a contiguous list of items, it helps code clarity and maintainability a lot to be able to operate on them in a "functional" way. (I'll also insist on referring to an array as a "list" - although in some languages, List is a native data type, in JS and this post, I'm referring to the concept. Everywhere I use the word "list" you can assume I'm talking about a JS Array) This means, to perform a single operation on the list as a whole ("atomically"), and to return a new list - thus making it much simpler to think about both the old list and the new one, what they contain, and

@ljharb
ljharb / array_iteration_thoughts.md
Last active May 22, 2024 09:22
Array iteration methods summarized

Array Iteration

https://gist.github.com/ljharb/58faf1cfcb4e6808f74aae4ef7944cff

While attempting to explain JavaScript's reduce method on arrays, conceptually, I came up with the following - hopefully it's helpful; happy to tweak it if anyone has suggestions.

Intro

JavaScript Arrays have lots of built in methods on their prototype. Some of them mutate - ie, they change the underlying array in-place. Luckily, most of them do not - they instead return an entirely distinct array. Since arrays are conceptually a contiguous list of items, it helps code clarity and maintainability a lot to be able to operate on them in a "functional" way. (I'll also insist on referring to an array as a "list" - although in some languages, List is a native data type, in JS and this post, I'm referring to the concept. Everywhere I use the word "list" you can assume I'm talking about a JS Array) This means, to perform a single operation on the list as a whole ("atomically"), and to return a new list - thus making it mu

@jfromaniello
jfromaniello / gist:8418116
Last active September 19, 2023 23:38
Example of authenticating websockets with JWTs.
var WebSocketServer = require('ws').Server;
var wss = new WebSocketServer({port: 8080});
var jwt = require('jsonwebtoken');
/**
The way I like to work with 'ws' is to convert everything to an event if possible.
**/
function toEvent (message) {
try {