Hello and welcome to the new episode of Code && Beyond. A podcast where we talk about software development and anything beyond that.
As software engineers we rely a lot of tools. Editors, IDEs, linters, version control, terminal emulators, virtual machines, and so on. Tools we bought, downloaded for free from the internet, and built ourselves.
In some ways these tools define or at least affect quality of final results we produce. They boost our delivery speed and automate some boring tasks. Sometimes they drive us crazy, let's admit that as well :smile: We depend on them and need them every single day.
Let's talk about favorite tools and try to find a way to build the most effective development environment ever!
My name is Alex and as usual I'm joined by my good friend Pablo. Hi Pablo! :smile:
We also have a special guest today. Juan Ibiapina. He has the most advanced development environment I've ever seen in my life :) Hello Juan!
Highlights of the week
Alex: Microsoft MakeCode.
Pablo: adventofcode.com
Juan: TODO
Special section
If you are listening to Code && Beyond on Spotify and like what we are doing. Let us know by leaving a rating on the show page :smile:
Q/A
Introduction: Juan
Do we cover online tools or simply focus on the local stuff?
Juan's dev environment
What are our favorite tools?
What tools we built ourselves? Why?
How to measure effectiveness?
Developer experience or DX
Outro
Okay! That's it for today. Thank you for listening! 🙂
In case of any questions, simply send us an email at "codeandbeyond at protonmail.com". You will also find the address in the show notes.
If you are listening to our show on Spotify. Don't forget to leave us a rating!
Keep being amazing! Bye! 👋🙂
Meta
Title
Building an effective development environment
Description
As software engineers we rely a lot of tools. Editors, IDEs, linters, version control, terminal emulators, virtual machines, and so on. Tools we bought, downloaded for free from the internet, and built ourselves.
In some ways these tools define or at least affect quality of final results we produce. They boost our delivery speed and automate some boring tasks. Sometimes they drive us crazy, let's admit that as well :smile: We depend on them and need them every single day.
Let's talk about favorite tools and try to find a way to build the most effective development environment ever!
We also have a special guest this time. Juan Ibiapina. He built one the most advanced development environments :)
Show notes
<p>As software engineers we rely a lot of tools. Editors, IDEs, linters, version control, terminal emulators, virtual machines, and so on. Tools we bought, downloaded for free from the internet, and built ourselves.</p>
<p>In some ways these tools define or at least affect quality of final results we produce. They boost our delivery speed and automate some boring tasks. Sometimes they drive us crazy, let's admit that as well :smile: We depend on them and need them every single day.</p>
<p>Let's talk about favorite tools and try to find a way to build the most effective development environment ever!</p>
<p>We also have a special guest this time. <a href="https://github.com/juanibiapina">Juan Ibiapina</a>. He built one the most advanced development environments :)</p>
<p>
Notes:
</p>
<p>
- <a href="https://github.com/alacritty/alacritty">Alacritty</a> - a fast, cross-platform, OpenGL terminal emulator.<br>
- <a href="https://nixos.org/">NixOS</a> is based on Nix, a purely functional package management system.<br>
- <a href="https://github.com/junegunn/fzf">fzf</a> is a general-purpose command-line fuzzy finder.<br>
- <a href="https://github.com/juanibiapina/dotfiles/">Juan's dotfiles.</a><br>
- <a href="https://github.com/jose-elias-alvarez/null-ls.nvim">null-ls.nvim</a><br>
- <a href="https://starship.rs/">Starship</a> - the minimal, blazing-fast, and infinitely customizable prompt for any shell!
</p>
<p>Have any feedback? Send us an email at <a href="mailto:codeandbeyond@protonmail.com">codeandbeyond@protonmail.com</a> or leave a voice message on <a href="https://anchor.fm/codeandbeyond">Anchor</a>.</p>
<p>---<br>
<em>Music by Twisterium from </em><a href="https://pixabay.com/users/twisterium-20030970/"><em>Pixabay</em></a><em>.</em></p>
Outline
Intro
Hello and welcome to the new episode of Code && Beyond. A podcast where we talk about software development and anything beyond that.
As software engineers we rely a lot of tools. Editors, IDEs, linters, version control, terminal emulators, virtual machines, and so on. Tools we bought, downloaded for free from the internet, and built ourselves.
In some ways these tools define or at least affect quality of final results we produce. They boost our delivery speed and automate some boring tasks. Sometimes they drive us crazy, let's admit that as well :smile: We depend on them and need them every single day.
Let's talk about favorite tools and try to find a way to build the most effective development environment ever!
My name is Alex and as usual I'm joined by my good friend Pablo. Hi Pablo! :smile:
We also have a special guest today. Juan Ibiapina. He has the most advanced development environment I've ever seen in my life :) Hello Juan!
Highlights of the week
Special section
If you are listening to Code && Beyond on Spotify and like what we are doing. Let us know by leaving a rating on the show page :smile:
Q/A
Outro
Okay! That's it for today. Thank you for listening! 🙂
In case of any questions, simply send us an email at "codeandbeyond at protonmail.com". You will also find the address in the show notes.
If you are listening to our show on Spotify. Don't forget to leave us a rating!
Keep being amazing! Bye! 👋🙂
Meta
Title
Description
Show notes