Very refreshing to see actual real details in this type of video instead of "Hey I wake up and get out of bed and drink coffee and walk my dog and then go to work and code and go home THE END" Thanks for the vid 👍
@filburtcioglu37292 жыл бұрын
Best comment ever
@crusaderpr76832 жыл бұрын
extremely accurate
@Teksnek422 жыл бұрын
Literally just rephrased the first 45 seconds lmao
@tex69292 жыл бұрын
I mean it’s about what you want. When you say “day in the life” it’s about everything in that day.. if you want “what does a dev do all day” then that’s something completely different
@The2425112 жыл бұрын
Yes, and this is how it's really done
@Bhupin2 жыл бұрын
I did an internship about 6 months ago and this was literally the process that I learned throughout my 3 months. I really wish I saw this before…Great content…
@joeshy2 жыл бұрын
Such a realistic take - I was expecting something vague, but this is extremely close to what I've seen in DevOps in the wild. I appreciate this a ton, even if only because it validates a lot of my takes on DevOps in my own day to day for a larger org.
@aaronmotacek93432 жыл бұрын
Love this. I’ve been working on solo projects for my software development career of ~2 years, and while I had an idea of how this stuff worked as a team, I haven’t been able to get this detailed of an overview yet. Looking to create a more formalized/professional skeleton of processes for even just myself sometime, so I’ll definitely be coming back to this when I have the time to do that. (currently time = build, build, build)
@TJHooper1232 жыл бұрын
This is 1000% more reflective of what a real day in the life of a software developer than those other day in the life videos, ESPECIALLY since more and more people are working remote. I've been on several different teams, and almost all of them follow this scrum pattern.
@matthewhiebing35072 жыл бұрын
Your day to day sounds awesome. I wish our team would pair program as much as you guys do. Sitting and just working through stuff with other developers sounds great.
@corail532 жыл бұрын
This sounds boring and inefficient as all hell.
@TreetopGamer2 жыл бұрын
@@corail53 if you want to build teams around agile techniques and want a high quality code output then pair programming is actually very useful in many scenarios
@blintcarton47032 жыл бұрын
One of the most realistic "day in the life" videos I've seen. THIS is what should people should see if they want to be come a developer, not most of those other videos out there. Calling out a few points that stood out to me : 1. the points of kanban vs srcum: In the end no solution is perfect, and many teams do merge to the two. Not that it's always the right answer but following strict scum process can end up being a time waste for some teams that can be more productive otherwise. 2. Pointing out that sometimes more vague stories are better and letting the devs have some creativity which can sometimes result in really great implementations. 3. Standups sometimes feel pointless, but if a small bit of info is gained every day it's worth it. The small pieces of info shared add up over weeks so when a PR is made no one is seeing something for the first time. 4. Sometimes big PRs do happen and its the nature of the project. It can sometimes be less productive to try and plan every story out in small little tasks and estimating every little piece individually rather than just getting started on it. 5. "Half the time you don't even finish them within the sprint ... stuff always keeps coming up working on stories". Plans usually don't fully work, and that's ok. The point is having a general plan and short term goals in place to move towards the long term goals. NONE of these points are made to dissuade someone from getting into this amazing career but some of the sensationalization I see online is wild. Many of these things can't be comprehended until you live it. One question I had - You said that you seem to prefer vaguer stories to allow devs some creative freedom, but also mention there is a UX team involved. How does the UX team work with the dev team? Are they providing wire-frames before a story is picked up, doing full mock ups, or providing input at a later stage? In my last team we struggled with where in the process are they best to be implemented.
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
Our company argues the ux and dev team should work together and only start doing the mock ups after the story is moved to in progress. In reality, our team ends up having ux make the designs before the devs start working on the story and we’ll bring in ux along the way if we find the functionality just seems bad or unintuitive as we implement it, or ask to redesign or add pagination if we think technical issues will come up with the implementation.
@j3gg2 жыл бұрын
Your scrum tangent rings true to me so hard. It's the most frustrating thing ever.
@andrewramirez31072 жыл бұрын
Hey man. I appreciate you making this video and showing us what it’s actually like. I’m working on becoming a software developer and it’s very informative to know what to expect once I break into the field. Many thanks!
@NyxxityChillin2 ай бұрын
Omg. Thank you for a REAL video on this. I couldnt care less about if they work out in the morning or have coffee yadda yadda, I want to know what the actual job is like.
@LeeerroyJenkinsАй бұрын
You say you're just going off on tangents, but tangents are often the most accurate view into what a day in the life of any job is haha
@dcknature2 жыл бұрын
Wow, a boring, but honest story about the work and coffee time or gaming at work BS 🥺? This is probably the best [a day in life of programmer] video on KZbin 👍. Thank you! P. S. Looks like I subscribed to the right channel 😎.
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
People try to make work seem like fun on KZbin showing their work cafeteria and other perks. Work is just work at the end of the day… 🍻
@cwancy2 жыл бұрын
Honestly, this was great to watch. So many videos "day in the life of a dev" are adulterated & sugar coated. Good to see something geniune.
@sebaseba84632 жыл бұрын
This is so interesting, it looks EXACTLY like my day as a fronted dev. Great job
@cong_way_euc2 жыл бұрын
you sir deserved a subcribe, all these day in life of a web dev out there just showcase of people waking up, eating lunch, going gym and etc. nothing related to the actual job details at all..
@jeff15712 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this man. I'll be onboarding a client in the next 2 weeks and being a fresh grad with no experience in the industry, this really helped me a lot on what it's like working in this kind of environment.
@Mnkeys2 жыл бұрын
Get all the information on requirements that you can. Understand what they want & WHY. Also, biggest of all, CHOOSE YOUR WORDING CAREFULLY. Some clients are douches.
@jeff15712 жыл бұрын
@@Mnkeys Thanks for this. I always ask minimal things to the person giving the task as I am quiet afraid that they might find it annoying if I ask even the simplest things. Reading this gives me encouragement to go and improve myself even more. Thanks again!
@Mnkeys2 жыл бұрын
@@jeff1571 it may be annoying if its the same question, but its sooo much better to understand fully early on. Troubleshooting is what causes you to go over estimate.
@goat26012 жыл бұрын
Your description of reducing the stories you put in during sprint planning is actually the point. The goal at the end of the day finding a useful metric for story points per sprint based on historical performance and using that to estimate future work. The problems, though, is that stories are never well-defined enough to put points on more than a sprint or two in advance, the client gets random desires to change behavior, UX never has bandwidth to put designs on backlog items, by the time QA gets back to you the sprint is over, and the whole system is pointless. But at least the PM gets a stupid, jagged burndown chart to show their bosses.
@noahwinslow32522 жыл бұрын
Your work environment looks pretty hardcore, impressed with the implementation of processes
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
This is actually the most laid back project I’ve been on. Again, we don’t follow scrum exactly, we evolved it to meet our project and teams needs over the years and we put less emphasis on things we find useless.
@noahwinslow32522 жыл бұрын
@@WebDevCody you know, it might be an interesting follow up video of what you would like to take from scrum and what you'd leave out, given your critiques
@iivarimokelainen2 жыл бұрын
what do you mean, what looks hardcore?
@noahwinslow32522 жыл бұрын
@@iivarimokelainen Its one thing for tech companies to say they implement all these policies, its another to implement them
@CRASH...2 жыл бұрын
thanks for this video, from the way you explained things it all sounds very stractured with all the processes being followed and teams collaborating together. I work on a service desk myself as a controller, and while we do follow similar procedures, and stick to similar meeting structures, it's pretty much always a mess with a lot of fundamental problems that are not being addressed (constant shift of employees on the project isn't helping either). Im currently looking to start learning for some more technical IT position, but don't know what to strive for yet, so a video like this from the dev perspective is very helpful
@reinkdesigns2 жыл бұрын
wait a minute, are you saying i dont get to wake up every day, sip martinis, take an adventure on my yacht, write 3 lines of code, and spend the night hanging out with my D&D group? then whats the point?
@TAHJBecomeYourBestSelf Жыл бұрын
This is the best day in the life video I’ve ever seen! The best and an actual day in the life. You are the best! I am subscribing!
@dannycodes2000 Жыл бұрын
This actually was really helpful all the other videos just explain basic life tasks and not coding
@hukunamutata2 жыл бұрын
Starting my new grad position next week and this is very helpful and easing my anxiety. Thank you
@80159082 жыл бұрын
Your first months as a new grad will just be all about learning. It's non-stop learning until you're like 10 years in. Even then you're still learning about new tech.
@XoXoEsi2 жыл бұрын
Good luck! Im 4 months in. So far so good.
@lul4202 жыл бұрын
3 months in! Not too bad, still learning lol
@pavi013 Жыл бұрын
It would be nice to see more videos like this, what the real work is from start to finish.
@ahmadaccino2 жыл бұрын
Going off of this I think a good video would be 'How to estimate your time as a developer' Even though its annoying to do, companies still want developers to estimate how long something will take before they start it
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
Might be interesting. I usually count the number of words or ac on the story and also how many questions are asked about the story in backlog refinement. If there are more words or more questions / confusion, higher estimate
@swattertroops-yaaa2 жыл бұрын
ask a senior dev on the team then multiply it by 1.5 if they reduce it tell them it will take that long because of the things you cannot forsee that will happen
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
@@swattertroops-yaaa well the point of the estimates are they should be your own estimates. If you don’t know, throw out a number and the group should take the average of all estimates. If they ask why it was high say “because it was an estimate”
@ahmadaccino2 жыл бұрын
@@WebDevCody i agree, when in doubt, a third party is huge, especially if their a developer on the same part of the project. I found that when estimating time, developers tend to look at the best case scenario then work down from that. I usually like the opposite, worst case scenario time and then build back up based on how straightforward or not the story is.
@jshstuff2 жыл бұрын
Estimates are my least favorite part of being a dev
@awwtergirl70402 жыл бұрын
Finally a real view of web dev work. Looks like a lot of other office jobs except it involves coding.
@buildervision70822 жыл бұрын
Wow. This might be one of the only videos online that has this information. It's exciting and sad at the same time. Thank you for this.
@monzerfaisal36732 жыл бұрын
As an EAGER af student, you have both put my mind at ease and also lit up a fire in me just by showing what work will actually be like! Now I can go practice tthese things!
@CaptTragedy2 жыл бұрын
Lol loved your description of all these "day in the life of a" video because I've seen so many lately I can agree they don't show you shit except how awesome their life is.
@timxio2 жыл бұрын
This is the most realistic video I have ever seen! Subscribed ✅ Can you please do a video if you could, about yearly reviews and what to talk about in 1:1 meetings with line managers? Thanks!
@scientist_nick2 жыл бұрын
As a web developer, this accurate if only by the fact that it is not entertaining. Just the reality of the situation.
@Hiperultimate2 жыл бұрын
One of the best work in a day kind of video. Keep it up!
@alveek2 жыл бұрын
finally a youtuber who actually works as a web developer 🖤
@mxc_clips2 жыл бұрын
Really interesting to hear that you work in Zoom with other devs and take turns driving. I've worked at 3 companies(albeit all start ups) and we all are working on independent features/bugs. We may all be working towards some overall Epic, but rarely just sitting on calls coding together. We do pair programming when needing help or wanting another opinion on architecture and stuff, but 99% of my dev time is alone and cranking out code. I agree on you points of sprints/retro feeling a little unnecessary. My last team did 1 week sprints and half the stuff just over flows and we end up being more kanban style in the end. Great video! cool to see another perspective.
@joserubenvarela92592 жыл бұрын
Nice video! I recently graduated as a Computer Science Engineer, but I'm kind of afraid to work as a dev because I keep thinking what would happen if I cant code some functionality they assign me and being judged by the team of developers 😕. Is it normal to feel that way as a no experience recently graduated developer?
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
If you work real real humans they would understand you’re a beginner and give grace. As long as you show you are trying and learning every day you should be good
@mgjulesdev2 жыл бұрын
When you are hired in a dev job as a beginner, you are often hired for the prospect you show in growth. So you should not be worried about trying to match what intermediate or senior developers are putting out there but show that you are growing and contributing the best you can. That is enough to earn the appreciation of the team
@Chuckichanly2 жыл бұрын
loved the honesty suscribed instantly after seeing you are a real one
@kirarevcrow2 жыл бұрын
That's exactly what we do, the only difference is that we use Discord. The methodology helps you knowing where you are at in the project, either for you or for the Project Manager/Owner
@bashbunni2 жыл бұрын
Yessss we love to see what it actually looks like to be a dev. I feel like when you start it seems like this mystery 😂
@martinlambov10 ай бұрын
You sir are a unicorn! 🦄 You've got a sub just for the first 3 minutes of the video!! Thank you for this ACTUAL day in the life content!
@3DMusicPunjabiАй бұрын
Suppose we are using react testing library and jest , so do we move our test cases to in dev or prod code is it for local env only ???
@firefox9110-p3i9 ай бұрын
this channel is a hidden treasure, keep going 🚀🚀
@techmentormaria2 жыл бұрын
this is actually so relatable!
@netsaosa49732 жыл бұрын
you forgot the part where you play ping pong with your coworkers for 7 hours
@johnpaulbatusan5184 Жыл бұрын
This is awesome! It's almost the same with what we do.
@noahwinslow32522 жыл бұрын
Good video, always nice to compare different work environments! A little frustrated with my in name only "scrum/agile" environment
@Madesh-qf6qn7 ай бұрын
Again , Quality content.Keep up
@Qopa2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. I have been contemplating working on code related jobs but I dont understand what the job entails so I never got that far in learning.
@bradleygilmore2 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this video, thanks so much for sharing.
@mgjulesdev2 жыл бұрын
Finally! An actual day in the life of a programmer. Thanks for showing how it really goes down for many of us.
@laptopuser51982 жыл бұрын
Good video, thanks for taking the time.
@pimas11 Жыл бұрын
Just wanted to compare my days as a web dev to yours, thanks for the video
@faridguzman912 жыл бұрын
dang im glad our scrum isnt as restrictive as this , also we acknowledge that estimations are arbitrary asf so we dont use those, and we dont use burndown charts either. its is done when it is done. less time wasted on useless meetings and more coding. like it should be
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
Yup our team is a combination of Kanban with scrum ceremonies. The estimates are not super important to our po, but he still wants some type of number, we don’t do burn downs. It’s done when it is done is our mentality on this project as well.
@swattertroops-yaaa2 жыл бұрын
it is a tradeoff though
@theblvckdev Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video man, now I know I've been watching showoffs the whole time, thanks for giving us the full gist
@alanbest58792 жыл бұрын
Agree 100% that is my experience of a day in the life of a software engineer. I've mainly used the Atlassian suite (Jira/Confluence/Bitbucket) along with slack/teams/flowdock/zoom for comms. I've tended to favour scrum for greenfield developments and Kanban where there is any element of maintenance/high tech debt. Imho both methodologies embrace the same fundamental principal: do the work required to get a smaller piece of value live; as opposed to waterfall which is complete all analysis/design for the whole project before you really get into development. I always think of agile as "Deliver value whilst it is still valuable" - I;ve worked on a lot of waterfall projects (not in the last 8 years though) where the world moved on and the product was just not fit for purpose once it was delivered :( Another thing we sometimes get to do as software engineers is have fun with R&D (technical spikes) or hackathons. A lot of companies support hackathons where employees form teams and develop novel solutions to a themed challenge over 24/48hrs. The challenge is normally related to the business but the rules are normally quite broad. Your team then spends whatever time they like to complete their project - late night pizza ^^. One of the really nice things, I've found, about hackathons is that it is normally open to all staff; the non-technical staff just have to join a team with some techs in, although I taken part in some where the team had no technical staff and provided a presentation and mock-ups in lieu of an application.
@xellestar2 жыл бұрын
-I'm curious what a dev with some experience such as yourself thinks of the arguably arbitrary cadence (eg 2 weeks) around which a lot of teams organize work. What is the value of doing this? What are the risks of adopting such a system but then failing to fit the work at hand into that cadence (work is finished earlier or later than the 2 week timeframe) ?- "the whole idea of scrum just doesn't make sense to me" Thanks you went on to answer this in the video! I appreciated the tangent and I don't know why these ways of working persisted for so long when just about every person I talk to can't identify significant value in them.
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
Yeah idk, Kanban makes the most sense to me. I think scrum was created by consultants to make money training teams to follow some type of structure. I’m assuming many teams don’t have a good set of process or communication which is what agile and scrum try to solve.
@eranxbe2 жыл бұрын
Very informative and accurate! Thank you for showing the real thing
@man-g-puro2 жыл бұрын
this is what im looking for, actual day of a developer...great vid...
@returncode00002 жыл бұрын
Haha, I have the same feelings about the retro😂 We are on 2 weeks sprints, JIRA, gitlab and additionally JBehave BDD testing because of the nature of the system (OAuth, Open ID Connect, Spring/Spring Boot/Spring Security).
@stefanradosavljevic36712 жыл бұрын
Man, thank you. Thank you very much!
@muzafarshahmarican93642 жыл бұрын
My team uses SCRUM methodology with JIRA and confluence suite. We have a much poorer cycle of feedback from users though, as requirements aren't always ironed out well from the Business Analysts and users, sometimes keep getting new tickets for sub-task that was not properly planned. We work on our own unless we hit bugs then we call each other. We don't have automated deploy triggers on merge and it has to be triggered after merging. The branching strategy here is also such that everyone works on their own branch and we have intermediate branch where all code is merged to. But everything else is pretty much the same like standup, meetings and work itself.
@mido95282 жыл бұрын
I'm still a student and this really helps me a lot thanks
@Ace32602 жыл бұрын
Do you and your co-workers ever use VSCode's live share feature for pair programming? It really shines for that.
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
Nope, I think we tried but didn’t like it. We just take turns driving on different machines and screen share in zoom. It takes like 10 seconds to commit and pull so it isn’t bad
@Ace32602 жыл бұрын
@@WebDevCody ah gotcha! Thanks for such an informative video regardless. Live share definitely has some quirks for sure!
@alexandrepereira65222 жыл бұрын
Amazing. Thanks for sharing this with us.
@delc82 Жыл бұрын
My team and I work the same way. Nice vid!
@parzivall5605 Жыл бұрын
LMFAO... exactly... I said to myself wtf does drinking coffee drone shots and skylines have to do with what you do as a dev... thank you so much for this video...
@basspalace29202 жыл бұрын
My day consists of endless meetings that could of been emails, wondering why stuff is broken, and sending the other devs memes on the teams group.
@Niaxe1112 жыл бұрын
Could work during meetings, or use your meetings to ask why shit is broken. Send memes in emails. Reuse highly upvoted comments in other youtube videos as your own.
@basspalace29202 жыл бұрын
@@Niaxe111 this was my own comment clown 😂
@jfluffydog211011 ай бұрын
Half way through i was like "why am i watching this? Im a web developer" lol
@WebDevCody11 ай бұрын
😂 maybe to see if the grass is greener anywhere else; it isn’t
@mrbranmar6 ай бұрын
Great breakdown. This is pretty much my experience, except at my company the PO is making the majority of the UI/UX decisions and with no design standards. It has led to pretty much no consistency in UI/UX across our apps and some odd experiences that don't really follow web standards. The AC looks exactly how you described it shouldn't be, explaining UI/UX requirements and sometimes names of DB tables/columns. So frustrating sometimes 🥱
@WebDevCody6 ай бұрын
Yeah those details should be left to the engineers. The po should change role if he is giving ux and table designs
@karanshedge5142 жыл бұрын
Amazing video . Thanks for sharing work environment.
@aliyyahidk Жыл бұрын
top-tier video!!
@k-c2 жыл бұрын
Scrum and Agile is good to an extent but after sometime it just starts working counterintuitively, so you have a lot of garbage code, unnecessary complexity and useless meetings with stupid deadlines. Kanban is probably my personal fav out of them all because of the flexibility in time allows creativity.
@5Sec2Cast12 жыл бұрын
Thank you this is what a day of developer videos should be not ooo lunch time oooo free swag came in
@austinwoolridge68682 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video. It was better day in life than others because it was more about the job not human life
@glenn41402 жыл бұрын
Thank you for doing this.
@ravengaspar50272 жыл бұрын
Just a quick question, how does this translate to junior devs/new hires with zero industry exp? Do they simply job shadow from the start or is this part of onboarding/training?
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
You’d be part of this same process and you’d learn along the way. You won’t really understand a lot of what’s going on at first but you’ll get a hang of it
@ravengaspar50272 жыл бұрын
@@WebDevCody thank you so much for all the insights!
@nickit69942 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this!
@Javier_Corado Жыл бұрын
I work on teams/outlook company with a client that uses Altasian tools. Living the most corporate dev experience here (At least we don't use a flash drive to do source control)
@darkmift2 жыл бұрын
This is quality content.
@oogabooga25812 жыл бұрын
ah yes, day and the life of imposter syndrome, with gaslighting managers, blocked kanban boards and pointless pissing contest meetings, glad i got out of it
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
Not all projects are that bad, maybe try a different company or something 😂
@MichaelSoriano2 жыл бұрын
Good video. I think you’re right. A lot of the daily “rituals” are unnecessary. It’s worse in the corporate world. Too many “cooks” in the kitchen.
@dabbopabblo2 жыл бұрын
The standup sounds like its more of a way of allowing the team leader to indirectly evaluate how much each member is contributing to the team
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
Nah it’s a chance for everyone to align on goals and ask for help if stuck on things
@dseanhd2 жыл бұрын
No BS. Just the way I like it 👏🏿
@bonchan44042 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your refactor videos and old videos about javascript . I'm 4 months already as a front end developer . I realized how important the basics are in javascript and react . Any advice ? Love from philippines ,
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
Just keep doing deliberate practice and try to learn one new thing daily.
@swattertroops-yaaa2 жыл бұрын
@@WebDevCody now that's something they don't tell ya
@bonchan44042 жыл бұрын
@@WebDevCody is doing daily codewars/leetcode challenges good or should i focus creating mini applications that focuses on front end ? whats much better . thank you !
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
@@bonchan4404 maybe a bit of both couldn’t hurt
@collieri2 жыл бұрын
I think I should make a day in the life of working as a lone developer fixing uncommented php and mysql from more than 15yrs ago and having to explain to the client why putting a band aid on a birds nest of exploitable code will take much much longer than the 4hrs they've contracted me to provide. Maybe I'll even include the point where I tell them to stuff it and recommend they go back to their original outsourced / offshore guy they found on Fiverr and who created the mess in the first place.. Phew, thanks. Feel better now. Nice vid bro.
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
Vent away before you lose your mind
@collieri2 жыл бұрын
@@WebDevCody I graduated in Computer Science in '97, you can imagine what my mind is like by now.Think Hieronymus Bosch.
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
@@collieri at least you can deploy your app via ftp still, that’s a plus
@collieri2 жыл бұрын
@@WebDevCody Hey, Im still running Fetch, nowt wrong with that. Says 500, what's that?
@markopolo22242 жыл бұрын
do you have a video on how you organize your folders and files i always struggle with this because i guess i never learnt how to organize them
@CJacuzzi Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. I was so, so tired of seeing people pour coffee
@rafaelperes41402 жыл бұрын
Damn I started the video like "OMG 😊 ANOTHER OF THOSE COOL VIDEOS OF HIM PLAYING CSGO ALL DAY AND GIVING NO FORKS TO WORK AND THEN DOING IT ALL IN 5 MIN!" and left it like "Life is pain 😔, the struggle is real 😞, work is work, I need to hug, world is chaotic!" haha made me scared but this was the first real video on this theme damn nice 👏👏
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
What company allows people to play csgo all day, please hire me
@isk8atparks2 жыл бұрын
@@WebDevCody The same companies that allow people to hold two different software dev jobs at once
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
@@isk8atparks sounds like I'm doing it all wrong
@tips-and-tricks-for-m-files2 жыл бұрын
Do you actually stand up during the standup? No, seriously - I'm a solo dev and I use Kanban to organize my work (one board for the project and a separate board for the overall business stuff). Using Visual Studio (the regular one, not VSC), GitHub, webpack 5. Build and deploy is all local in a VM, because that's where the environment is. From pressing "Build" to starting the finished application is about 10 seconds (it used to be 2-3 seconds before I started to use webpack). In fact I am working on a Kanban board addon for an enterprise software that doesn't have one. Having said that, it would be insightful to hear from you what feature of Zenhub you value the most.
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
Idk zenhub isn’t that special, they are all the same to me. Being able to assign users to cards and move cards between states is really all one needs. I do like how since it’s built on top of GitHub issues, anytime i put a reference to an issue number, it automatically becomes a link. That’s a GitHub feature though
@tips-and-tricks-for-m-files2 жыл бұрын
@@WebDevCody So about assignment of cards: do you typically assign a card to s/o else or do you do the Kanban "pull" i.e. seek out a card that you can work on and assign to yourself?
@WebDevCody2 жыл бұрын
@@tips-and-tricks-for-m-files we grab the next card in the priority list. The backlog is prioritized, so we always grab off the top. we usually assign everyone who is working on the story onto the card. We try to have one lead person on the card who is responsible for making sure it’s always moving across the line and can answer questions about the story progress
@gabrielyangzon77452 жыл бұрын
Nice , thank you for sharing
@parkerchambers39962 жыл бұрын
nobody wanna point out that the title is missing the word "look"?
@truthseeker22362 жыл бұрын
Mine is bum rushing start of die, get hyped up, get good progress and chill for rest of day. Once I burn out once I don't go back and try again, low hours but functional.
@CJacuzzi Жыл бұрын
One question, why are you using Fibonacci sequence numbers for the complexity of tasks rather than just 1-10 for instance? I didn't really catch that
@WebDevCody Жыл бұрын
you can use whatever, some people use t-shirt sizes, small, medium, large, x-large (but I've heard people complain that approach it is a form of fat shaming)
@amitozsingh306311 ай бұрын
How we test changes after we implemented in vs code, do we use local host, or do we have seperate links for test version of website.
@WebDevCody11 ай бұрын
Test everything locally, then test in cicd pipeline with automated tests, then deploy to a real environment to test again, then deploy to prod
@ryanquinn12572 жыл бұрын
I like scaling problems as Fibonacci haha. I also never say time estimates. I say complexity estimates. Sometimes complex problems have easy solutions and take less time, but often will take more time for more complexity. So it’s a probability it’ll take a long time and not an estimate of time. Complex problems can benefit from stewing in subconscious so give them more time in brainstorming approach phase unless emergency.
@ponderatulify2 жыл бұрын
I really dont get the complexity metric.
@lasjames75162 жыл бұрын
lmfao dude when you described other day in the life videos
@bobdpa2 жыл бұрын
Good info here. Thanks
@sumrak2192 жыл бұрын
No ice vanila-strawberry mocha with pastrami sandwich with avocado and absolutely no light cocktails meeting with friends - not a real work! After working alone for a several years I'm going to start working in a team soon. Was good hearing what it might look like in a real world.
@samib5518 ай бұрын
are the stories seperated between frontend and backend team or both work together on the same story
@WebDevCody8 ай бұрын
We don’t have a frontend backend team split. Every developer is responsible for the entire story