ShopTalk

168: Rapidfire 45


Listen Later

Another RAPID-FIRE for you this week; nothing but questions from our dear listeners and answers from your favorite podcast’s hosts.
We answer questions about hosting client sites pre-launch, CSS animation libraries, dealing with burnout, merge conflicts, deploying WordPress sites, code portfolios, the importance of blogging and where you should publish your content, metrics to consider when re-designing a website, working with WordPress’s REST API, and more.
We talked about (roughly in order):
Q & A:
3:26 I’m a bit confused about how can a client have remote access to a project during development, before it goes live. Is it a personal server on an old PC, a paid web hosting service, a free web hosting service, a repository (like GitHub) or something else?
11:31 I just started with a new agency where I’m leading the entire team. I’m trying to push doing more CSS3 animations on hover effects and not worrying about supplying older browsers with that animation. The team has used GreenSock.js to handle animations cross browser. I argue that using a library like GreenSock is fine for large complicated animations but hover effects and minor effects we should move to pure css3 and keyframes. Am I going overboard with this thinking or should I back off and let the team continue to use something like GreenSock?
19:25 I have been actively working in some area of the web industry for the last 12 years. Currently 30 years old and have my dream job as a Director for a great company. I have always had times of feeling burnt out and needing to take a break over the years. Now with a young family, house, hobbies etc. I find that these seasons are turning from weeks to months. Any tips on how to break out of the rut? How do you guys continue to stay excited about the industry and furthering your knowledge and skill sets?
25:30 We use git for version control and follow the git flow model, mostly. We’re getting into a bit of a kerfuffle with our compiled CSS. A few developers might be working on the front end, on different branches, with SASS which then compiles to a CSS file. Then BOOM SHAKE THE ROOM, we have a merge conflict. All the .scss files are fine but that compiled and compressed style.css is an abomination. How do you lot deal with this kind of thing? It’s been suggested that we .gitignore style.css and compile on the server when we push the site but I’m against that for some reason or other. Is there a better way?
33:00 How should I handle the wp-config.php file when deploying a WordPress site? I use Beanstalk and I’m working alone. I’m struggling with this because there are essentially three different versions of the wp-config: local, staging and production. Should I put it in .gitignore and just manually create it on the staging and production servers?
36:48 GitHub has always been a standard for developers and having an online code portfolio. However I like CodePen much better and seems to have a great user base. How do you decide which platform to use, or should I focus on platform for code bits? Secondly, for blogging, should I use a platform like CodePen blogs since I have no audience, or should I do my own thing?
44:34 I’m redesigning and reengineering an organization’s website from scratch. I have clear design goals but want to show objective engineering gains as well, what are the best metrics to compare before and after a redesign? Page-size and load time are obvious, but what other ones should I be thinking about?
50:15 How did the trend of photoshopping your face into an astronaut’s helmet start? I see this in a lot of profile pics. I’m considering joining the craze but I’d like to know the full history before jumping in. Is there something that I’m missing?
52:48 I learned web development and templating through WordPress, like many other people. With the coming WordPress REST API, I’m looking to play around and learn another method for front end development that pulls site data from the WordPress REST [...]
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

ShopTalkBy Chris Coyier & Dave Rupert

  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9

4.9

500 ratings


More shows like ShopTalk

View all
The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source by Changelog Media

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source

289 Listeners

The Bugle by The Bugle

The Bugle

3,720 Listeners

Software Engineering Daily by Software Engineering Daily

Software Engineering Daily

624 Listeners

Talk Python To Me by Michael Kennedy

Talk Python To Me

583 Listeners

Soft Skills Engineering by Jamison Dance and Dave Smith

Soft Skills Engineering

288 Listeners

Pod Save America by Crooked Media

Pod Save America

87,123 Listeners

Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats by Wes Bos & Scott Tolinski - Full Stack JavaScript Web Developers

Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats

986 Listeners

Tech Brew Ride Home by Morning Brew

Tech Brew Ride Home

961 Listeners

Strict Scrutiny by Crooked Media

Strict Scrutiny

5,800 Listeners

The CSS Podcast by The CSS Podcast

The CSS Podcast

59 Listeners

PodRocket by LogRocket

PodRocket

60 Listeners

Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Web Development, Neat by RobbieTheWagner, Charles William Carpenter III, Adam Argyle, and The Radcast Network

Whiskey Web and Whatnot: Web Development, Neat

55 Listeners

The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart by Comedy Central

The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart

10,716 Listeners

Search Engine by PJ Vogt

Search Engine

4,577 Listeners

Better Offline by Cool Zone Media and iHeartPodcasts

Better Offline

570 Listeners