At first, I started writing a book about very practical, hands-on debugging practices, but quickly realized that the "mix of tools and best practices" you're talking about is a much more valuable skill, as well as bug prioritization, and even bug reporting.
So, as a result, catching errors early, type guarding, logging to debug asynchronous operations, and error tracking are all major parts of the book.
Not really. I am almost sure that eventually I'll do it, but what I have at this point is more like "dreams" or "ideas", very far from being materialized.
Also, I know that I want to write about something less practical and more fun. Maybe, making music. Writing about fun parts is so much easier
I did, thank you! It was hard and long, though. Much harder and longer than I expected it to be. The book ended up being very different from what I initially conceived (for the better, I hope.) I have too much to say to fit it all in one comment, to be honest :)
Mostly yes. It touches upon debugging unit tests and server-side code, as well as methodologies applicable to debugging in general, but the practical parts are almost exclusively client-side.
Another writing style guide, barely distinguishable from many others, but written in tone like it's radically different. Maybe this is precisely the point, though.
Profitability is just a matter of time.
Uber was not profitable for years, too.
Just wait until the economy of scale kicks in.
Alchemy is here to stay.
Element conversion is only getting started!
I have the same story in the same country with presumably the same organization (Sanquin). I used to give blood, but not anymore because I don't find what they're doing ethical.
Terrible fact-checking and I doubt the good faith by Associate Press.
The authors (Monika Ścisłowska and Rafał Niedzielski) claim that Polonaise was banned in USSR, which is false. Neither it was ever banned in Russian Empire.
The culture.pl article mentions that
> dancing the polonaise was temporarily banned in the Congress Kingdom
Which could be the case, I don't know, but I couldn't google other sources in 10 minutes either.
Any existing policy inevitably has a gray area, no matter how elaborate it is. That's okay if the author didn't cover corner cases in a short essay.
> You don't just magically know what to buy.
Knowing what you need is not magic. I don't remember much advertising lately that would tell me how a good can satisfy my existing needs. Mostly, they are trying to make me feel I need something I didn't need before
Best of luck either way.