npm Dependency Hell
A deep dive into the terrifying moment when you run npm install and 1,347 packages appear in your node_modules, three of which are maintained by a single person in Nebraska.
// A literary, self-ironic dev blog|
A deep dive into the terrifying moment when you run npm install and 1,347 packages appear in your node_modules, three of which are maintained by a single person in Nebraska.
Por fin llegó, la compra tan esperada y polémica. La quería muchísimo, pero el precio y las reseñas sobre su balance me hacían posponerla. Un poco de espontaneidad y aquí está.
La primavera se acerca y me está entrando la inquietud. Nació una idea: crear un shooter multijugador con vista cenital en el navegador con JavaScript, ambientado en el espacio. Título provisional: STDS (Space Top Down Shooter).
Son las 4 de la madrugada, el insomnio me ha pillado otra vez. Normalmente me pongo a trabajar. Para mí es una bendita hora de paz y silencio: ¿qué más hace falta para escribir código bonito y mantenible?
A chronicle of the five stages of grief as experienced through a CI/CD pipeline that refuses to turn green, and the lessons learned along the way.
How I went from 'types are for people who can't hold code in their head' to 'I will never write untyped JavaScript again' in about six months.
Every developer inherits a codebase they didn't write. The question isn't whether to refactor -- it's how to do it without losing your mind or breaking everything.
A love letter to git bisect -- the underappreciated tool that turns a haystack of commits into a binary search for the needle that broke everything.
In which a simple color change spirals into a deep dive through cascading stylesheets, specificity calculators, and the liberal use of !important.
There's a special kind of clarity that comes at 3 AM when it's just you, a bug, and the quiet hum of a monitor. Or maybe that's just sleep deprivation talking.