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Podcast
Full Stack Radio g2r2d
Por Adam Wathan
199
126
A podcast for developers interested in building great software products. Every episode, Adam Wathan is ed by a guest to talk about everything from product design and experience to unit testing and system istration. 25k5a
A podcast for developers interested in building great software products. Every episode, Adam Wathan is ed by a guest to talk about everything from product design and experience to unit testing and system istration.
152: Ben Orenstein - How to Stand Out When Applying for a Job at a Small Company
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Topics: Putting yourself in the shoes of the person reviewing your application Crafting a high quality application tailored to a specific position Standing out in a more traditional hiring process by doing something a little extra Showcasing very specific examples of your work instead of asking the person reviewing your application to go hunting for it Having good questions for the person interviewing you Sharing your ideas and what you think the company should be focused on Creating a job for yourself that doesn’t even exist Proving that you can take ownership of projects and ship them by yourself Showing off skills you have that aren’t directly related to the job Links: Ben on Twitter Tuple Tailwind Labs job postings ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them.If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
47:43
151: DHH – Building HEY with Hotwire
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Links: Hotwire HEY ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them.If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
01:14:00
150: Secret Screencasting Tips & Behind the Scenes of Tailwind CSS 2.0
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them.If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to check out our products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Statamic 3, Jack's full-featured flat-file CMS, designed for developers and clients alike. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
59:12
149: Choosing a Payment Processor, Radical Icons & W3C Hype
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Links: Changes to Gumroad's PayPal Radical icons Jack's hand-drawn avatars W3C's CMS Selection Report
56:38
148: Accessible Focus Styles, Tailwind Labs on YouTube, and Secret Projects
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them.If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to check out our products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Statamic 3, Jack's full-featured flat-file CMS, designed for developers and clients alike. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
59:46
147: Surviving GitHub Issues, the Statamic 3 Launch Aftermath, Tailwind 1.8, and Headless UI
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them.If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to check out our products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Statamic 3, Jack's full-featured flat-file CMS, designed for developers and clients alike. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
01:19:45
146: Launching Statamic 3, GitHub Sponsors, Tailwind CSS v1.7, and Preparing for Laracon
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Adam and Jack talk about how the Statamic 3 launch went, and adding GitHub Sponsor tiers to the Statamic GitHub organization and what to give people in exchange for sponsoring. They also talk about the new Tailwind CSS v1.7 release, and the new features like gradient . Finally, they work through some ideas Adam is preparing for his Laracon talk on “Building component libraries with Tailwind CSS”.
01:20:54
145: Statamic 3.0 and Tailwind CSS 2.0
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Links Statamic 3.0 Tailwind CSS v1.7.0 @90sWWE on Twitter
01:15:50
145: Statamic 3.0 and Tailwind CSS 2.0
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Jack McDade s Adam to talk about what he's been up to building up to the Statamic 3.0 launch (it's out now!) and Adam shares a bunch of ideas he's been working on for Tailwind CSS v2.0. LinksStatamic 3.0 Tailwind CSS v1.7.0 @90sWWE on Twitter
01:15:50
144: Gary Bernhardt - TypeScript and Testing
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
In this episode, Adam talks to Gary Bernhardt about building Execute Program, why he chose to build it as a full-stack TypeScript application, and the implications using TypeScript has on what you need to test. Topics include:Why Gary decided to write Execute Program as a full-stack TypeScript application instead of using a Ruby or Python backend like he may have traditionally Do you actually have to write less tests if you have a good type system? What does a good type system give you that tests can't give you? Using io-ts to type check incoming data How to think about structuring your code to best take advantage of the benefits your type system gives you and minimize the need to write tests Pushing conditional logic to the core of your system to reduce the number of tests you need to write at the edges The correlation between type errors and behavioral bugs, and how a type system can help you catch mistakes you don't think to test for Do type errors signal that you're missing a test? Structural vs. nominal type systems, and the benefits of structural type systems like used by TypeScript and Go Best practices for type-checking within a function in a structural type system like TypeScript The power of ing literal types like true or "active" in addition to traditional types Links:Destroy All Software Execute Program TypeScript "Are tests necessary in TypeScript?" io-ts TypeScript course on Execute Program Gary's tweet about unions with literal types ing the show:I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them. If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
01:24:58
144: Gary Bernhardt - TypeScript and Testing
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Topics include: Why Gary decided to write Execute Program as a full-stack TypeScript application instead of using a Ruby or Python backend like he may have traditionally Do you actually have to write less tests if you have a good type system? What does a good type system give you that tests can't give you? Using io-ts to type check incoming data How to think about structuring your code to best take advantage of the benefits your type system gives you and minimize the need to write tests Pushing conditional logic to the core of your system to reduce the number of tests you need to write at the edges The correlation between type errors and behavioral bugs, and how a type system can help you catch mistakes you don't think to test for Do type errors signal that you're missing a test? Structural vs. nominal type systems, and the benefits of structural type systems like used by TypeScript and Go Best practices for type-checking within a function in a structural type system like TypeScript The power of ing literal types like true or "active" in addition to traditional types Links: Destroy All Software Execute Program TypeScript "Are tests necessary in TypeScript?" io-ts TypeScript course on Execute Program Gary's tweet about unions with literal types ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them.If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
01:24:58
143: Rich Harris - Svelte and Defending the Modern Web
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
In this episode, Adam talks to Rich Harris about Svelte, and why we should keep pushing forward with the modern web even if it's not perfect yet. Topics include:What is Svelte and how is it different than other JS frameworks in the space? What special behavior does the Svelte compiler layer on top of vanilla JS syntax and why? Why the lack of render functions in Svelte isn't a real problem in practice What are you giving up when you choose to build your application with something like Rails instead of JavaScript? Why should we be trying to write our applications in a single language, and why should it be JS? What's wrong with striving to write an application entirely in a language like Ruby instead of entirely in JS? Why HEY doesn't really make a good argument against the modern web Thoughts on bundle sizes, code-splitting, and why aggressive code-splitting is still better than frequent round trips to a server-rendered app How Svelte and Sapper handle SSR Why page transitions are the killer argument for building SPAs if we want to be able to compete with native experiences Should we be thinking about JavaScript applications as native applications in of offline- and eventual consistency, or should we keep thinking of them as webpages that depend on the network? Links:Svelte Sapper "Second-guessing the modern web" "In defense of the modern web" ing the show:I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them. If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
01:15:31
143: Rich Harris - Svelte and Defending the Modern Web
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Topics include: What is Svelte and how is it different than other JS frameworks in the space? What special behavior does the Svelte compiler layer on top of vanilla JS syntax and why? Why the lack of render functions in Svelte isn't a real problem in practice What are you giving up when you choose to build your application with something like Rails instead of JavaScript? Why should we be trying to write our applications in a single language, and why should it be JS? What's wrong with striving to write an application entirely in a language like Ruby instead of entirely in JS? Why HEY doesn't really make a good argument against the modern web Thoughts on bundle sizes, code-splitting, and why aggressive code-splitting is still better than frequent round trips to a server-rendered app How Svelte and Sapper handle SSR Why page transitions are the killer argument for building SPAs if we want to be able to compete with native experiences Should we be thinking about JavaScript applications as native applications in of offline- and eventual consistency, or should we keep thinking of them as webpages that depend on the network? Links: Svelte Sapper "Second-guessing the modern web" "In defense of the modern web" ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them.If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
01:15:31
142: Jason Cohen - Learning to Hire and Manage a Team
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
In this episode, Adam talks to Jason Cohen of WP Engine about hiring people to the Tailwind team, figuring out what to focus on, and learning how to manage. Topics include: How do you decide what role to hire for? Why it's so important to figure out exactly what your biggest struggle is before hiring How to decide what the most important thing to focus on is when it feels like there's too much to do Why it's important to consider the impact of hiring for a specific role on your own happiness vs. just the company's bottom line Coming to with the fact that you can't do everything, and why it's important to focus on something instead of spreading yourself thin across everything Mistakes people make when they start managing a team for the first time Links: Jason's blog, one of the greatest treasure troves of startup advice on the internet Deg the Ideal Bootstrapped Business, one of Jason's MicroConf talks ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them. If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
55:16
142: Jason Cohen - Learning to Hire and Manage a Team
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Topics include: How do you decide what role to hire for? Why it's so important to figure out exactly what your biggest struggle is before hiring How to decide what the most important thing to focus on is when it feels like there's too much to do Why it's important to consider the impact of hiring for a specific role on your own happiness vs. just the company's bottom line Coming to with the fact that you can't do everything, and why it's important to focus on something instead of spreading yourself thin across everything Mistakes people make when they start managing a team for the first time Links: Jason's blog, one of the greatest treasure troves of startup advice on the internet Deg the Ideal Bootstrapped Business, one of Jason's MicroConf talks ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them.If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS. Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
55:16
141: Jason Fried - Running the Tailwind Business on Basecamp
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
In this episode, Adam talks to Jason Fried about growing the Tailwind team and how to best use Basecamp to keep his particular company organized. He also walks through tons of real examples from their recent work on HEY, sharing lots of behind-the-scenes stuff about how Basecamp use Basecamp themselves. Topics include: How did Basecamp evolve from being a team/client communication tool to focusing on keeping your whole company organized, and is it really even that different? How exactly should we set up Basecamp on day one to a small 3-5 person remote software team? What tools should we use and which ones should we ignore for now? Finding the balance between being organized enough and splitting things up too much How big should projects be? Is "HEY v1" a project, or is a project something more like "HEY File Attachments"? What tools do you normally enable for regular projects, and how do you use them? How are you normally using chat at the individual project level? Why todo lists should be created by the individuals doing the work, and not the people asg the work How should we use the company HQ project? What are some less obvious ideas we can apply there that can make a big difference? Using a "what we're working on" project to keep everyone on the team in the loop and feeling connected Using "heartbeats" to summarize the work a team has been doing over a period of time for the rest of the company Advice on bringing on new employees and how to assign them their first project When you're such a writing-driven company, how do you make sure decisions get written down when they are made in real-time instead of naturally occurring within Basecamp? Screenshots: Example of a "what did I work on?" check-in Example of a heartbeat Example of the "What Works" project Example of an announcement in the HQ project Example of a conversation on a todo Links: Basecamp Shape Up, Basecamp's recent book on how they work Going Remote: Basecamp Walkthrough, a livestream where Jason and DHH go over their real Basecamp ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them. If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
01:06:44
141: Jason Fried - Running the Tailwind Business on Basecamp
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Topics include: How did Basecamp evolve from being a team/client communication tool to focusing on keeping your whole company organized, and is it really even that different? How exactly should we set up Basecamp on day one to a small 3-5 person remote software team? What tools should we use and which ones should we ignore for now? Finding the balance between being organized enough and splitting things up too much How big should projects be? Is "HEY v1" a project, or is a project something more like "HEY File Attachments"? What tools do you normally enable for regular projects, and how do you use them? How are you normally using chat at the individual project level? Why todo lists should be created by the individuals doing the work, and not the people asg the work How should we use the company HQ project? What are some less obvious ideas we can apply there that can make a big difference? Using a "what we're working on" project to keep everyone on the team in the loop and feeling connected Using "heartbeats" to summarize the work a team has been doing over a period of time for the rest of the company Advice on bringing on new employees and how to assign them their first project When you're such a writing-driven company, how do you make sure decisions get written down when they are made in real-time instead of naturally occurring within Basecamp? Screenshots: Example of a "what did I work on?" check-in Example of a heartbeat Example of the "What Works" project Example of an announcement in the HQ project Example of a conversation on a todo Links: Basecamp Shape Up, Basecamp's recent book on how they work Going Remote: Basecamp Walkthrough, a livestream where Jason and DHH go over their real Basecamp ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them.If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
01:06:44
140: Evan You - Reimagining the Modern Dev Server with Vite
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
In this episode, Adam is talks to Evan You about Vite, a new dev server and build tool for modern JavaScript projects. Topics include: What is Vite and what makes it different than existing tools like Webpack? How do ES Modules actually work in the browser and what are the limitations? Will we ever be able to use ES Modules in production for large complex projects? How does Vite work under the hood, and how does it non-JS files like Vue files, or CSS files? How hot module replacement is implemented under the hood in Vite Optimizing modules with many dependencies to keep the development experience fast What is VitePress and how does it compare to VuePress? Bundling sites for production with Vite What's the roap for Vite 1.0? Links: Vite VitePress Rollup ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them. If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
48:09
140: Evan You - Reimagining the Modern Dev Server with Vite
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
Topics include: What is Vite and what makes it different than existing tools like Webpack? How do ES Modules actually work in the browser and what are the limitations? Will we ever be able to use ES Modules in production for large complex projects? How does Vite work under the hood, and how does it non-JS files like Vue files, or CSS files? How hot module replacement is implemented under the hood in Vite Optimizing modules with many dependencies to keep the development experience fast What is VitePress and how does it compare to VuePress? Bundling sites for production with Vite What's the roap for Vite 1.0? Links: Vite VitePress Rollup ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them.If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
48:09
139: Alex DeBrie - DynamoDB for Relational Database Diehards
Episodio en Full Stack Radio
In this episode, Adam is talks to Alex DeBrie about DynamoDB, and how it compares to relational databases like MySQL. Topics include: Does DynamoDB only make sense for things like your cache, or is it a good choice for a primary data store? An overview of the terminology used in DynamoDB and how the terminology compares to a relational database How primary keys work in DynamoDB What data types are available in DynamoDB How DynamoDB is a schemaless database Why it's important to understand your access patterns in advance with DynamoDB, unlike in a relational database Understanding why and how you usually have multiple record types in a single DynamoDB table What "index overloading" is in DynamoDB Understanding partition keys and sort keys How to structure your data in DynamoDB to make it possible to query related data, and how those queries work How secondary indexes work, allowing you to access the same data in different ways How to accommodate access patterns you didn't know about before you designed your schema When to flatten relationships vs. nest them Should you use DynamoDB if you aren't "web-scale"? How local development works with DynamoDB Links: DynamoDB Homepage Alex's blog, loaded with great DynamoDB content The DynamoDB Book, Alex's recent book DynamoDB Guide ing the show: I decided to stop taking sponsors for the show because I think ments are annoying and no one wants to listen to them. If you do want to the show, the best way to do it is to purchase one of my products: Tailwind UI, a collection of professionally designed, fully responsive HTML components built with Tailwind CSS Refactoring UI, a book and video series I put together with Steve Schoger on deg beautiful interfaces, without relying on a designer. Advanced Vue Component Design, a course on deg simpler, more flexible Vue components that are both more powerful and easier to maintain. Test-Driven Laravel, a massive video course on deg robust Laravel applications with TDD. Learn how to build a real-world application from scratch without writing a single line of untested code. Refactoring to Collections, a book and video course that teaches you how to apply functional programming principles to break down ugly, complex code into simple transformations — free of loops, complex conditionals, and temporary variables.
58:30
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