No parrots involved, but lots of pancakes and waffles in his examples. That sounds like opening a hole in the space-time continuum but it's actually quite logical and useful as Bart explains the usefulness of this really well. The second thing he teaches us is that functions can actually return functions. He said some purists may see this syntax as an abuse of getters but it's a pretty slick method that yields very readable APIs. These are heavily used by Jest, and without learning about them, they would simply look like magic. He explains in some adorable examples involving a parrot (named Polly of course) how getters can be used to construct short but powerful syntaxes that seem quite counterintuitive at first glance. In this installment of Programming By Stealth, Bart Busschots finishes firming up our foundation on a few more things before we meet Jest, which will be the Test Driven Development (TDD) environment we'll be learning next time. Join the discussion on our DiscordYou can also help support Programming Throwdown through our Patreon * Special operations for multi-get /multi-stepĠ0:25:30 Make the Internet Yours Again with an Instant Mesh Network Sale during the holiday season Any sale item will receive the deal off.
* Make the Internet Yours Again With an Instant Mesh Network MeisterTask Coupons up to 8.25 Off + Free Shipping. Public database & cache services (Planetscale & Upstash)
In this show, Patrick and I explain why caching is so important and how these systems work under the hood. Many people have heard the names "redis" or "memcached" but fewer people know what these tools are good for or why we need them so badly. Help support Programming Throwdown through our Patreon
Reach out to us via email: can also follow Programming Throwdown onįacebook | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Player.FM If you’ve enjoyed this episode, you can listen to more on Programming Throwdown’s website: He shares his experience and tips regarding serverless computing and its ever-growing opportunities in modern computing.Ġ0:20:10 Challenges with going serverless Erez Berkner, CEO of Lumigo, talks about his company, going serverless, and why you should too.