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The Portable Pattern Guide Workshop #5

Closed rachelober closed 8 years ago

rachelober commented 9 years ago

Submission Template

Title of Presentation (required)

The Portable Pattern Guide

Type of Presentation (required)

[ ] Standard Length Talk (20 or 30 mins) [ ] Lightning Talk (5 or 10 mins) [x] Workshop (1.5-2hrs)

When would you ideally like to speak

list a month October 27th

Description (required)

Ideally, I want everyone to walk out with their own skeletal beginning of a pattern guide. I be providing a dummy website to work with through the exercises. It will be important for them to apply the skills to their own code base afterwards, but the highest bang for their buck will be to follow along in class, see and answer and be able to work from there.

All material will be printed out and resources available ahead of time to give attendees different ways of working through the material to assist best in their method of learning.

There will be 3 exercises, one worked together as a class, one as individuals, and then paired exercise.

Who is this for? Anyone in a company looking to compartmentalize like styles and needs to communicate with designers or other developers.

What do I mean by portable pattern guide? You site styles might need to be included across sites/projects and you want to compartmentalize your assets/styles/brand so that it can get the widest use.

Speaker Info (required)

Rachel Ober is a Ruby on Rails developer based in New York City. A true renaissance woman, Rachel has significant experience in and a passion for user experience, user interface and cognitive design. Rachel is a senior developer at Paperless Post where she serves as technical mentor for all front end developers on the development team and leads front end development for the company. She also teaches the ins and outs of Rails at General Assembly for their Back End Ruby on Rails course. Rachel encourages other women developers to hone their skills by contributing to the 3-day conference Write/Speak/Code as a co-organizer. Founded in 2013, Rachel organizes and volunteers her time teaching women Ruby and Ruby on Rails through RailsBridge NYC. Rachel lives in Brooklyn with her husband and fur-child Isabella and loves scrapbooking and card making.

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