I was just derping around on SoundCloud yesterday listening to music while I worked. Because I had cucumber acceptance tests on my mind from my open feature files (also I was eating a salad with cucumber haha) my fingers for some reason decided to type "cucumber" into the search box.
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As you may know by now, I've recently been very heavily using JavaScript and Angular to build web applications. Before that I had used loads of other object-oriented languages like C#, C++, Java, ActionScript, Objective-C, Swift... However, I had never learned a "Lisp" language and haven't really done too much with functional programming other than knowing that it's a pretty big buzz word these days. Anyway, I was creeping around on Twitter one day and came across the profile of Tim Baldrige (@timbaldridge), and in his profile description he wrote, "programmer who prefers closure". I thought that was interesting and asked him why he preferred Clojure, and that started the whole spiral to my increasing interest in Closure.
I was looking for a nice twitter bird outline today, and someone commented with a link to this great site that allows you to search for glyphicons: http://glyphsearch.com/. I had stumbled across this site before and forgot about it so I'm writing this blog post to help burn it into my memory. ;)
This is a fantastic video on Continuous Integration. I features speakers from Sauce Labs and CloudBees speaking about what CI should be for you and how to get stated with Sauce Labs and Jenkins.
I love automated testing, and I really love Protractor testing. Although Protractor is an e2e testing tool created by Google and popularized on AngularJS projects, I've heard that it was possible to use it with non-Angular sites. When I tried I had a bit of trouble, but in this post I'll show you how I managed to get it working.
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AuthorThe posts on this site are written and maintained by Jim Lynch. About Jim...
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