Stop Giving Depressing Code Reviews
You can improve morale, prevent rework, and build team unity through one simple suggestion—give as much positive code feedback as you do correction.
297 Results
You can improve morale, prevent rework, and build team unity through one simple suggestion—give as much positive code feedback as you do correction.
Not all content on your site is created equal. Marshall shares how aria-live can help you bubble up the right information for visually-impaired users and downplay the rest.
Many people think that a fast site means boring design, but it is a balancing act to ensure that a site looks beautiful while delivering the content fast. Katie shares tested processes that help keep performance as a priority in her work.
If you’re doing it right, anything you build on the web is constantly evolving. No matter how much planning you do, you’re going to need to refactor your CSS.
Do you hate having production build dependencies? Patrick will show you how to use Mina and CircleCI to kick them nasty thoughts.
How we use the BBC News team’s Wraith to track visual changes.
What could be better than performance testing? How about automating that stuff as part of your build so it actually happens, and you’re held accountable? Yeah, that sounds pretty good.
Turning a cooking blog into a sustaining software business to help people around the world save time creating monthly freezer meals.
Ryan shares why you should look at older code with a healthy dose of empathy with the help of a few perspectives across the industry.
The next time you build that big, gnarly offscreen nav, think about how it works for users relying on screen readers and consider using area-hidden.
Katie Jennings
Vice President of Business Development