48 min listen
Can small libraries be conventional?
FromFrontend First
ratings:
Length:
66 minutes
Released:
Oct 3, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Sam and Ryan chat about two new EmberMap series, Forms and Async testing, as well as Sam's keynote at EmberCamp and the best way to avoid product gaps in open-source software. They also answer some listener questions.
Topics include:
Forms (1:18)
Splitting forms into containers and presenters
Avoiding premature abstractions (7:03)
Which components do you carry from project to project?
Asynchronous testing (14:47)
Testing animations
Sam's keynote at EmberCamp on Product gaps (19:04)
Product gaps at companies vs. in OSS
Are small packages and convention over configuration at odds with each other?
Convention over configuration that decomposes well
The risk of bad high-level abstractions in OSS
How to "finish" an OSS project
Questions:
What's the state of TypeScript support in Ember? (48:15)
When are observers actually appropriate to use? (54:57)
Any tips on refactoring async relationships? (59:34)
Topics include:
Forms (1:18)
Splitting forms into containers and presenters
Avoiding premature abstractions (7:03)
Which components do you carry from project to project?
Asynchronous testing (14:47)
Testing animations
Sam's keynote at EmberCamp on Product gaps (19:04)
Product gaps at companies vs. in OSS
Are small packages and convention over configuration at odds with each other?
Convention over configuration that decomposes well
The risk of bad high-level abstractions in OSS
How to "finish" an OSS project
Questions:
What's the state of TypeScript support in Ember? (48:15)
When are observers actually appropriate to use? (54:57)
Any tips on refactoring async relationships? (59:34)
Released:
Oct 3, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Making the impossible, impossible: Sam and Ryan talk about their Functional CSS training at EmberConf, some ideas for hiding styling implementation details from templates, a new setup for multiple staging environments, an idea from data modeling called "Making the impossible, impossible", and how to use data down actions up effectively in forms. They also answer some listener questions. by Frontend First