One of the major challenges of building rich applications for the web, is that our foundation (JavaScript in the browser) is a document viewer, not an application platform. In fact, if you show a mobile or desktop app developer the primitives we are given to start with, the typical reaction is that we’re missing many important building blocks.
All of the tools we rely on like Angular 2, React, Ember, Polymer, etc... all are, essentially, shims and hacks that we make use of while we wait for things like the W3C Web Component spec to be completed and implemented in browsers. As it becomes more feasible to build on the standards instead of a framework, it becomes important for developers to have awareness of what those standards are, what’s missing from the official spec, and how well of a job our favorite libraries do with establishing alignment.
We’ll take a close look at the W3C component spec, and compare it to the concept of a Component in the React.js library, the and the Ember.js 2 and Angular 2 frameworks. We’ll try to do a few things using native web components, involving rendering and styling an encapsulated piece of interactive UI. Along the way, we will highlight the things that we’re waiting in the W3C spec, which we’d need to land before we can start decoupling our apps from a specific third party tool, and rely on “Native Web Components”
Dealing with Death, Dying & Aging Training Courses The Pathway Group
Dealing with Death, Dying & Aging Training Courses are good for anyone working within the care field. It covers the sensitive topics of death, the process of dying and the bereavement process for all those affected. This course looks specifically at older persons and highlights the importance of a person-centred approach. Learners will gain a good understanding of all areas and will learn the skills to positively bring their clients and colleagues through the process. The course lasts for three hours and a certificate of attendance will be issued to all participants. The course can be delivered in one of our training centres or a location that is better suited to your staff. The course can also be tailored to your specific training needs.
One of the major challenges of building rich applications for the web, is that our foundation (JavaScript in the browser) is a document viewer, not an application platform. In fact, if you show a mobile or desktop app developer the primitives we are given to start with, the typical reaction is that we’re missing many important building blocks.
All of the tools we rely on like Angular 2, React, Ember, Polymer, etc... all are, essentially, shims and hacks that we make use of while we wait for things like the W3C Web Component spec to be completed and implemented in browsers. As it becomes more feasible to build on the standards instead of a framework, it becomes important for developers to have awareness of what those standards are, what’s missing from the official spec, and how well of a job our favorite libraries do with establishing alignment.
We’ll take a close look at the W3C component spec, and compare it to the concept of a Component in the React.js library, the and the Ember.js 2 and Angular 2 frameworks. We’ll try to do a few things using native web components, involving rendering and styling an encapsulated piece of interactive UI. Along the way, we will highlight the things that we’re waiting in the W3C spec, which we’d need to land before we can start decoupling our apps from a specific third party tool, and rely on “Native Web Components”
Dealing with Death, Dying & Aging Training Courses The Pathway Group
Dealing with Death, Dying & Aging Training Courses are good for anyone working within the care field. It covers the sensitive topics of death, the process of dying and the bereavement process for all those affected. This course looks specifically at older persons and highlights the importance of a person-centred approach. Learners will gain a good understanding of all areas and will learn the skills to positively bring their clients and colleagues through the process. The course lasts for three hours and a certificate of attendance will be issued to all participants. The course can be delivered in one of our training centres or a location that is better suited to your staff. The course can also be tailored to your specific training needs.
Elixir & Phoenix - fast, concurrent and explicitTobias Pfeiffer
Elixir and Phoenix are all the hype lately - what's great about them? Is there more to them than "just" fast, concurrent and reliable?
This talk will give a short intro into both Elixir and Phoenix, highlighting strengths, differences from Ruby/Rails and weaknesses.
Elixir & Phoenix - fast, concurrent and explicitTobias Pfeiffer
Elixir and Phoenix are all the hype lately - what's great about them? Is there more to them than "just" fast, concurrent and reliable?
This talk will give a short intro into both Elixir and Phoenix, highlighting strengths, differences from Ruby/Rails and weaknesses.