Hotchpotch 42
Posted on Mon 05 December 2016 in english
Elixir
- Beyond 10,000 Lines - Lessons Learned from a Large Phoenix Project.
- Mix.Shell.Quiet - This is Mix’s default shell when the MIX_QUIET environment variable is set.
- Strategies for Migrating a Phoenix App on Heroku.
- Mock Modules and Where to Find Them.
- Mocks and explicit contracts.
- How We Deploy Elixir Apps.
- Using Poolboy w/Elixir.
- The goal of this post is not to compare features, performance or usability, or even to choose a ‘most secure’ client. Instead it tries to establish what it takes to use these clients to connect securely to a server, given an HTTPS URL.
- Sending Email via SMTP with Elixir Phoenix.
- HTTP unit tests using ExVCR.
- Roll your own Email & Password Authentication with Guardian, Comeonin & Phoenix.
- Binary data over Phoenix sockets.
- Using Apollo client with Elixir's Absinthe.
- New Router features in Plug 1.3.
- Phoenix GraphQL Tutorial with Absinthe.
- How Supervisors Work.
Elm
- Creating Your First Elm App: From Authentication to Calling an API (Part 1).
- Creating Your First Elm App: From Authentication to Calling an API (Part 2).
- Interacting with a DOM element using Elm (audio/video tag example).
- Type Bombs in Elm.
- Elm 0.18 released!
- Property Based Testing And Better Modelling.
Gamedev
- Video: How to use the warp and cage transform for concept art.
- Video: Sculpt your assets with the liquify transform.
- Video: Understanding transparency masks.
- Introducing GameMaker Studio 2.
- Video: Nintendo - Putting Play First.
- Video: The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap's dungeon design.
Rust
- Announcing Rust 1.13.
- A quick tour of Rust’s Type System.
- A Scheme interpreter written in Rust.
- Error Handling in Rust.
Other
- What Your Conference Proposal Is Missing.
- Martin Fowler: TestPyramid.
- Video: Why do semantics matter?
- Being privacy-aware in 2016.
- A Guide to Reading Neil Gaiman’s THE SANDMAN.
- History of Unix, from a 2,500 line kernel to FreeBSD 11, as source code, in git, with tags.
- Google: Making every (leap) second count with our new public NTP servers.