InfoQ Homepage Development Content on InfoQ
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TDD is Not Just about Tests
Fabrizio Romano proposes using TDD to transform business requirements into tests, driving code and tests development in harmony.
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Escaping the Bikeshed with JSON-API
Rob Valk introduces the JSON-API 1.0 spec, taking a look at JVM ecosystem support for the standard with the katharsis.io library and its integration with the Mule runtime.
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The Joy of Microservices
Ian Cooper provides arguments for using microservices, why they are useful and when it makes sense to implement such a solution.
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Building Wireless Sensors
Don Coleman discusses building wireless sensors on a variety of hardware (ESP8266, Particle Photon, Arduino MKR1000), presenting some options for collecting, storing, and visualizing the sensor data.
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Decoupled APIs through Microservices
David Simons introduces microservices as a developer's API tool, discussing why and when makes sense to use them, and the tools that make it easy to deal with a microservices architecture.
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The Joy of Not Coding
Jeroen Janssens discusses several tricks for polyglot programmers helping to mix and match different languages and tools in a project.
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The Marvel Guide for Developers
Melinda Seckington discusses how to become a superhero developer by helping others start with the origin stories, and lessons learned from Marvel superheroes.
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3M RPS: .NET Open Source is Happening in a Big Way
Jeffrey Fritz digs into the how, what, and why of .NET Core and ASP.NET Core on a Mac. This technical session is demo-heavy.
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Adventures in Elm: Events, Reproducibility, and Kindness
Jessica Kerr introduces Elm, focusing on its architecture: how it overturns what is essential in object-oriented and even back-end functional programming.
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Rust in Production
Steve Klabnik overviews Rust’s value proposition, focusing on examples and anecdotes from companies using Rust in production today.
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How to Be an Awesome Open Source Contributor
Christos Matskas discusses the many ways to contribute to OSS, sharing tips and what it takes to become a successful first-time contributor and collaborator in this open community.
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C# Today and Tomorrow
Mads Torgersen discusses how C# is evolving, how the teams work in the open source space, and some of the future features and changes to the language (C# 7).