@sim I found #PHP to be fairly easy, but with strange inconsistencies (particularly function names). Unlike #Perl or #Ruby, I could come back to something six months later and quickly figure out what it did and how it did it. That was about 15 years ago, but it could still be true today.
Full-stack developer, been working with the web since the 90s. #HTML, #CSS, #Javascript, #Python, #PHP, enough #Ruby and #Node to get myself into trouble. #LAMP is fine but other stacks are fine too; I'm a quick learner.
Any position is okay; I've been out of the office for a while and I''d be happy doing just about anything as long as the income is stable.
@lnxw48a1 @usrlocalshare When I first learned #ruby I used #ramaze partly because it just wasnt #rails, but also for the ways it wasn't Rails: more minimal, less coupled, etc.
When Rails 3 came out I got a gig working with it, and looking back at Rails 2 I was glad I hadn't had to suffer that epoch. :-)
The push is on to fund someone to work on a proper API for #diaspora*. $600 has now so far been donated and will be paid out to the person(s) that produce a functional and core developer satisfying API for diaspora*.
Before writing code, make sure to get your plans straight. We’ve already talked that the authentication should be based on OpenID Connect. Still, that leaves the actual API structure to be discussed before any implementation should be worked on. Make sure to plan and communicate with the core team on design concepts for example here or at GitHub here. Then just hack away for at least $600 in reward!
The push is on to fund someone to work on a proper API for #diaspora*. $600 has now so far been donated and will be paid out to the person(s) that produce a functional and core developer satisfying API for diaspora*.
Before writing code, make sure to get your plans straight. We’ve already talked that the authentication should be based on OpenID Connect. Still, that leaves the actual API structure to be discussed before any implementation should be worked on. Make sure to plan and communicate with the core team on design concepts for example here or at GitHub here. Then just hack away for at least $600 in reward!