Closed mcrowder65 closed 4 years ago
Hi there! Thank you for taking the time to submit a talk! Speakers like you make the DC tech community awesome — and we’re glad you’re here.
Rest assured that organizers of quite a few meetups have just been notified of your proposal.
Want to target one or two groups specifically? Mention the group by tagging @dctech/[group]
— but please avoid tagging groups at random or tagging more than one or two. Thanks for keeping this group productive and spam-free!
Not interested in giving this talk anymore? Not a problem at all! Thanks for considering it in the first place! Go ahead and close this issue, so we know not to bother you about it.
Hi there — thanks for submitting this talk! It’s been a year since the last activity — would you mind taking a look to see if you’re still interested in presenting about this topic, and if the talk’s content is still up-to-date?
If everything’s still good, just drop a comment here and I’ll pop back into hibernation like a good little robot.
If you’re no longer interested in giving this talk, or the talk is out-of-date, feel free to close this issue.
Should I not hear back in a week, I’ll close this issue so you needn’t feel guilty about it. ❤️
Thanks for your contribution to the tech community in DC!
Keep being awesome! 🤖✨
About You
Your Name: Matt Crowder Twitter handle (optional): https://twitter.com/mcrowder65 The best way to reach out to you: email - mcrowder65@gmail.com A quick bio: Software engineer currently at Walmart labs, passionate about react and javascript, I enjoy teaching javascript, running, and lifting weights.
Your Talk
Title: React Hooks What your talk is about: Here's the abstract: First, we'll learn about higher-order-components, and talk about how they're good, and why they're bad.
Then, we'll learn about render props, and talk about how they're good, and why they can end up being bad (in some cases).
Then, we'll learn how to convert "bad" render props/hoc's into easy to read, good code written with hooks.
Then we'll specifically learn about useState, when to use useReducer instead of useState.
Then we'll take a look at a class equivalent useEffect example, then, refactor that using useEffect.
And lastly, we'll learn when/how to use useMemo and useCallback.
How long will your talk be?
Meta
Do you need help crafting your talk?