JavaScript Jabber

JSJ 396: Publishing Your Book with Jonathan Lee Martin


Listen Later

Jonathan Lee Martin is an instructor and developer. He got his start in teaching at Big Nerd Ranch doing 1-2 week trainings for mid to senior developers, and then transitioned to 16 week courses for career switchers. He also worked for Digital Crafts for a year, and then wanted to focus on building out his own personal teaching brand. One of his first steps toward building his own brand was to publish his book, Functional Design Patterns for Express.js.The inspiration for Jonathan’s book came from his experience teaching career switchers. He wanted to experiment in the classroom with teaching functional programming in a way that would be very approachable and applicable and dispel some of the magic around backend programming, and that became the template for the book. Jonathan loves the minimalist nature of Express.js and talks about its many uses. He believes that it knowing design patterns can take you pretty far in programming, and this view is related to his background in Rails. When he was working in Rails taming huge middleware stacks, he discovered that applying design patterns made builds take less time. He talks about other situations where knowing design patterns has helped. Express.js leans towards object oriented style over functional programming, and so it takes to these patterns well. Express.js has its shortcomings, and that’s where Jonathan’s favorite library Koa comes into play. The conversation switches back to Jonathan’s book, which is a good way to start learning these higher level concepts. He purposely made it appealing to mid and senior level programmers, but at the same time it does not require a lot of background knowledge. Jonathan talks about his teaching methods that give people a proper appreciation for the tool. Jonathan talks more about why he likes to use Express.js and chose to use it for his book. He cautions that his book is not a book of monads, but rather about being influenced by the idea of composition over inheritance. He talks about the role of middleware in programming. The panel asks about Jonathan’s toolchain and approach to writing books, and he explains how his books are set up to show code. They discuss the different forms required when publishing a book such as epub, MOBI, and PDF. Jonathan found it difficult to distribute his book through Amazon, so he talks about how he built his own server. Charles notes that your method of distributing your book will depend on your goal. If you want to make the most money possible, make your own site. If you want to get it into as many hands as possible, get it on Amazon.Many of the JavaScript Jabber panelists have had experience publishing books, and Jonathan shares that you can reach out to a publisher after you’ve self-published a book and they can get it distributed. Jonathan believes that If he had gone straight to a publisher, he would have gotten overwhelmed and given up on the book, but the step by step process of self-publishing kept things manageable. The panelists discuss difficulties encountered when publishing and editing books, especially with Markdown. Jonathan compares the perks of self-editing to traditional editing. Though he does not plan to opensource his entire editing pipeline, he may make some parts available. The show concludes with the panelists discussing the clout that comes with being a published author. Panelists
  • Charles Max Wood
  • Christopher Buecheler 
  • J.C. Hyatt
With special guest: Jonathan Lee MartinSponsors
  • Adventures in Blockchain
  • Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan
  • The Freelancers’ Show
Links
  • Big Nerd Ranch
  • Digital Crafts
  • JSJ 070: Book Club JavaScript Allonge with Reginald Braithwaite
  • JavaScript Allonge by Reginald Braithwaite
  • Functional Design Patterns for Express JS by Jonathan Lee Martin
  • Node.js
  • Express.js
  • Koa
  • Minjs 
  • Sinatra
  • Http.createserver
  • Monads
  • Middleware 
  • Markdown
  • Pandoc
  • Diff-match-path library
  • Epub
  • MOBI
  • LaTeX 
  • Stripe Checkout
  • Fstoppers
  • Softcover
  • Bookseller API 
Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter PicksChristopher Buecheler:
  • Cluisbrace.com newsletter
J.C. Hyatt:
  • Corsair wireless charging mouse pad
Charles Max Wood:
  • Magnetic whiteboard baskets
  • Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle books
Jonathan Lee Martin:
  • Eric Elliot JS
  • YellowScale
  • Follow Jonathan and find his book at jonathanleemartin.com
Special Guest: Jonathan Lee Martin.

Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/javascript-jabber/donations

Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/javascript-jabber--6102064/support.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

JavaScript JabberBy Charles M Wood

  • 3.8
  • 3.8
  • 3.8
  • 3.8
  • 3.8

3.8

62 ratings


More shows like JavaScript Jabber

View all
Software Engineering Radio - the podcast for professional software developers by team@se-radio.net (SE-Radio Team)

Software Engineering Radio - the podcast for professional software developers

273 Listeners

Hanselminutes with Scott Hanselman by Scott Hanselman

Hanselminutes with Scott Hanselman

382 Listeners

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source by Changelog Media

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source

288 Listeners

Ruby Rogues by Charles M Wood

Ruby Rogues

45 Listeners

Software Engineering Daily by Software Engineering Daily

Software Engineering Daily

626 Listeners

Adventures in Angular by Charles M Wood

Adventures in Angular

33 Listeners

JavaScript Jabber by Charles M Wood

JavaScript Jabber

234 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

287 Listeners

iPhreaks by Charles M Wood

iPhreaks

17 Listeners

React Native Radio by Jamon Holmgren, Robin Heinze, Mazen Chami

React Native Radio

67 Listeners

Python Bytes by Michael Kennedy and Brian Okken

Python Bytes

214 Listeners

Adventures in Angular by Charles M Wood

Adventures in Angular

15 Listeners

Ruby Rogues by Charles M Wood

Ruby Rogues

21 Listeners

My Angular Story by Charles M Wood

My Angular Story

0 Listeners

My Ruby Story by Charles M Wood

My Ruby Story

0 Listeners

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

Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats

985 Listeners

The freeCodeCamp Podcast by freeCodeCamp.org

The freeCodeCamp Podcast

485 Listeners

Practical AI by Practical AI LLC

Practical AI

212 Listeners

AWS Podcast by Amazon Web Services

AWS Podcast

204 Listeners

.NET Rocks! by Carl Franklin and Richard Campbell

.NET Rocks!

242 Listeners

The Stack Overflow Podcast by The Stack Overflow Podcast

The Stack Overflow Podcast

63 Listeners

The Real Python Podcast by Real Python

The Real Python Podcast

140 Listeners

Latent Space: The AI Engineer Podcast by Latent.Space

Latent Space: The AI Engineer Podcast

101 Listeners