The Bike Shed

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Aug 4, 2020 • 29min

255: Aiming for 'Capable'

On this week's episode, Steph and Chris chat about the relatively new Rails view_component library from GitHub, Steph talks about her work with Storybook as part of extracting and defining a design system, and they chat about the attr_extras project with convenience helpers for ruby & Rails apps. They round out the conversation with some keyboard updates (ErgoDox onramp is steep!) and project rotation notes. This episode is brought to you by ScoutAPM. Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy! ErgoDox Atreus Keyboard Rails view_component Storybook.js Styleguidist attr_extras Sorbet static types for Ruby Sponsored By:Scout: Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy.Support The Bike Shed
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Jul 28, 2020 • 42min

254: Listener Mailbag Roundup Rodeo

On this week's episode, Steph celebrates passing an important test and discovers an API that returns different data than it's provided while Chris asks the important bikeshed question "What is the proper maximum line length?". They also roundup the latest listener questions and discuss establishing freelancing rates, property-based testing, and time tracking skills that help them manage competing priorities. This episode is brought to you by ScoutAPM. Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy! Prettier Ruby Toptal Upwork QuickCheck Hypothesis Rantly Sponsored By:Scout: Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy.Support The Bike Shed
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Jul 21, 2020 • 47min

253: Find Yourself Through The Art of Podcast

On this week's episode, Steph and Chris have a brief chat about Snowpack, a new and ultra-speedy bundler in the front-end world, and revisit a conversation around namespacing models in Rails. The conversation then shifts to a discussion of the ins and outs of hosting a podcast and how folks might be able to dive in if they're interested in starting one themselves -- from selecting topics, to the hardware and software they use, to the guiding philosophy in how to discuss technical concepts. This episode is brought to you by: ScoutAPM - Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy Indeed - Click through and get started with a free seventy five dollar credit for your first job post "Selling Technical Debt Back to The Business" workshop Snowpack Vite React Fast Refresh Saron's tweet about questions re: starting a podcast The War of Art Fireside.fm AudioHijack ZenCastr Audio-Technica ATR2100x-USB Microphone Shure SM7Bs Foam Mic Cover (aka pop filter, aka windscreen Patreon The Ginger People Sponsored By:Scout: Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy.Indeed: Click through and get started with a free seventy five dollar credit for your first job postSupport The Bike Shed
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Jul 14, 2020 • 55min

252: I'm a Designer Now

On this week's episode, Steph and Chris discuss leveraging the Unix utility sed to search files and remove unnecessary test setup, using Vim's Arglist to create a to-do list for file edits, and budgeting time for fancy command-line scripts. They then take a deep dive into the world of utility-first CSS and TailwindCSS. This episode is brought to you by: ScoutAPM - Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy ExpressVPN - Click through to get get an extra three months FREE on a one-year package Register here to attend the free panel discussion "How to sell technical debt to the business" sed The Unix Chainsaw by Gary Bernhardt awk Vim's Arglist as a File-Centric Todo List xkcd React Podcast - 88: Adam Wathan on Making Your Own Money, Refactoring UI, and tailwindcss Tailwind CSS Tailwind Cheat Sheet Redesigning the Tuple Client UI Bourbon PurgeCSS thoughtbot dotfiles PostCSS Sponsored By:Scout: Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy.ExpressVPN: Click through to get get an extra three months FREE on a one-year package!Support The Bike Shed
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Jul 7, 2020 • 37min

251: Absent-Minded Whistling

On this week's episode, Steph and Chris discuss using JSONB to store survey responses and the differences between JSON and JSONB, using (or not using!) exceptions in Ruby and the fail keyword, the pros and cons of namespacing models in Rails to organize features, and a new recommendation for running tests from vim. This episode is brought to you by ScoutAPM. Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy! Seagull Mic Drop vim-test plugin for running tests vim-rspec thoughtbot's plugin for running specs from vim JSON types in Postgres Ruby fail keyword Avdi Grimm and Jim Weirich on exceptions The Zen of Python Idris programming language Sponsored By:Scout: Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy.Support The Bike Shed
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Jun 30, 2020 • 42min

250: To Infinity and Beyond

On this week's episode, Chris and Steph discuss the importance of using inclusive language, branching into new branch names, and strategies that encourage the use of inclusive terminology. Chris also shares his latest experience with merging two systems that were split apart back into one system, tackling conflicting foreign keys and competing auth libraries. Steph discusses using polling vs web sockets to monitor work being completed in a background job and communicating to the user the various states of success and failure. Seagulls are the Worst Angie Jones Tatiana Mac Pariss Athena Renaming factory_girl to factory_bot Juneteenth Empathy Online SlackBot - Keep Conversations Inclusive Clearance Devise Active Model Serializers Blueprinter 203: A Blessed Monkeypatch (Eileen M. Uchitelle) JWT Action Cable Akka Streams Support The Bike Shed
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Jun 23, 2020 • 41min

249: What Would You Say You Do Here?

On this week's episode, Steph and Chris trade some consulting and everyone comes out a winner. Steph talks about a win and a loss on the battlefield of refactoring, and Chris shares a related effort around identifying and removing unused code. Chris shares a pattern his team has been using with a special "demo" flag to provide small enhancements but otherwise keep sales demos within the product. Steph then shares some friction related to using dependabot on her team's project that hints at more foundational ideas at the intersection of workflow, team dynamics, testing, deployment. And finally, Chris asks Steph for her thoughts on how best to add testing around the structure of API responses. This episode is brought to you by Datadog. Click through to get a free 14-day trial and a free Datadog t-shirt! Coverband for production code coverage Flipper feature flag gem Dependabot JSON Schema Swagger rspec-request_snapshot Say no to more process, say yes to trust One electron theory Sponsored By:Datadog: Click through to get a free 14-day trial and a free Datadog t-shirt!Support The Bike Shed
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Jun 16, 2020 • 34min

248: Here Be Dragons

On this week's episode, Steph shares a keyboard confession and interest in migrating to a split keyboard layout. Chris dives into creating static error pages that are independent of the app while still leveraging the app's CSS framework. They also respond to a listener question about Conventional Commits and discuss when automation tooling feels helpful vs harmful. ErgoDox EZ Keyboard Keyboardio Atreus Tailwind CSS PurgeCSS CSS Used Chrome Extension Conventional Commits SemVer semantic-release husky GitHub Issue and Pull Request TemplatesSupport The Bike Shed
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Jun 9, 2020 • 49min

247: Acronyms By Moonlight

On this week's episode, Steph and Chris discuss potential approaches to a complex client-side workflow, Chris shares the highs and lows of his recent adventures revising the caching in a REST API, Steph shares an Ember testing pro-tip and then explores the questions it brings up, and lastly, they revisit prettier-ruby and it's fantastic configuration setup. This episode is brought to you by Datadog. Click through to get a free 14-day trial and a free Datadog t-shirt! prettier-ruby configuration Chrome DevTools Keyboard Shortcuts Test'em - Ember test runner Chrome full-page screenshots Rails action caching Memcachier Rails stale? and fresh_when etag calculation Rails cache method for "fragment caching" Rails travel_to time helpers Rspec and_call_original Single-table inheritance vs. polymorphic associations in Rails Inertia.js Sponsored By:Datadog: Click through to get a free 14-day trial and a free Datadog t-shirt!Support The Bike Shed
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Jun 2, 2020 • 28min

246: A True Movement (Pariss Athena)

We are pausing our normal tech-talk this week in support of the ongoing protests and to re-share the #BlackTechTwitter episode with Pariss Athena from our sister podcast, Giant Robots. During the past week, millions of people across the country have participated in protests in response to the killing of George Floyd and the systemic racism that plagues our nation. For everyone fighting for equality and justice, we see you, we love you, and we support you. Black lives matter. Black culture matters. Black communities matter. For those looking for ways to take action, we have provided a few resources in the show notes. The list is intentionally short as we ask everyone to research ways to get involved and listen to leaders in the Black community. Fighting for equality falls on each of us, regardless of race or position, to work together to fight racism and unequal treatment. Stay Safe. Giant Robots: A True Movement (Pariss Athena) Black Tech Twitter Black Tech Pipeline Black Lives Matter Resources provided by Diversify Tech Original Notes from Giant Robots Episode 343 Pariss Athena, Hiring & Product Team Member at G2i, creator of #BlackTechTwitter, and founder of Black Tech Pipeline, shares her journey from never hearing about code to viral awareness campaign creator, as well as discusses visibility, finding value on twitter, and life online with thousands of followers. Resilient CodersThe Tweet that started #BlackTechTwitter"Hannibal Buress Is Building An Arts And Technology Center For The Future Masterminds Of The West Side"Black Tech PipelinePariss on TwitterSupport The Bike Shed

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