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@jesstelford
jesstelford / LEARNING_JS.md
Last active August 2, 2019 23:58
Learning JS links and suggestions

Learn by doing

If you're brand new to the language (welcome!) start here: http://jsforcats.com/ (Silly name, but excellent content)

If you've already got a little bit of coding under your belt, the ⁠⁠absolute best⁠⁠ place / way to learn is with https://nodeschool.io workshops (Full disclosure; I've written 2 of them)

They're all free open source at your own pace workshops where you are given a bit of info, a task, and you must code it up before you can move on (it runs unit tests over your code to verify you completed it)

JavaScript, the weird parts

link to notes https://git.io/vgpKc

about Sher Minn

  • front-end web engineer
  • funemployed, but joining Viki.com in a week
  • recently spent 3 months in NYC at the Recurse Center
    • retreat for programmers
  • where people go to be better at what they do
@blackfalcon
blackfalcon / git-feature-workflow.md
Last active October 8, 2025 17:33
Git basics - a general workflow

Git-workflow vs feature branching

When working with Git, there are two prevailing workflows are Git workflow and feature branches. IMHO, being more of a subscriber to continuous integration, I feel that the feature branch workflow is better suited, and the focus of this article.

If you are new to Git and Git-workflows, I suggest reading the atlassian.com Git Workflow article in addition to this as there is more detail there than presented here.

I admit, using Bash in the command line with the standard configuration leaves a bit to be desired when it comes to awareness of state. A tool that I suggest using follows these instructions on setting up GIT Bash autocompletion. This tool will assist you to better visualize the state of a branc