
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Maarten loves building web and cloud apps. His main interests are in .NET web technologies, C#, and application performance. He is Developer Advocate at JetBrains and created SpeakerTravel, a tool to help conference organizers. Maarten is a frequent speaker at various national and international events. In his free time, he brews his own beer.
Topics of Discussion:
[4:34] The mindset difference between developing software applications for everyday use versus developer tools, and how it affects the programming process.
[5:40] What is JetBrains, and why should .NET devs care?
[6:44] IDE stands for integrated development environments.
[9:01] JetBrains announcing Rider.
[10:31] Essential software development patterns for desktop applications.
[13:35] What does the code generally look like? Is it .NET events? Is it observer pattern?
[15:54] Maarten talks about the approach of creating general-purpose business applications with modular components, making development and maintenance more efficient.
[18:35] TeamCity, a continuous integration (CI) server used internally and for building products.
[19:50] The concept of a safe merge.
[21:11] JetBrains Toolbox.
[21:53] How Maarten compartmentalizes tests.
[24:44] Static analysis tools for code quality and customization.
[27:38] Duplicate code identifier.
[30:41] VS Code.
[32:13] What are some interesting things to look out for in the future?
Mentioned in this Episode:
Clear Measure Way
Architect Forum
Software Engineer Forum
Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at [email protected].
Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor)
.NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon!
Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events!
Maarten’s Blog
Rider
Resharper
Building a .NET IDE with JetBrains Rider
NDepend
Visual Studio for Mac Retirement Announcement
.NET Annotated Monthly — Sept 2023
Want to Learn More?
Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
4.5
1919 ratings
Maarten loves building web and cloud apps. His main interests are in .NET web technologies, C#, and application performance. He is Developer Advocate at JetBrains and created SpeakerTravel, a tool to help conference organizers. Maarten is a frequent speaker at various national and international events. In his free time, he brews his own beer.
Topics of Discussion:
[4:34] The mindset difference between developing software applications for everyday use versus developer tools, and how it affects the programming process.
[5:40] What is JetBrains, and why should .NET devs care?
[6:44] IDE stands for integrated development environments.
[9:01] JetBrains announcing Rider.
[10:31] Essential software development patterns for desktop applications.
[13:35] What does the code generally look like? Is it .NET events? Is it observer pattern?
[15:54] Maarten talks about the approach of creating general-purpose business applications with modular components, making development and maintenance more efficient.
[18:35] TeamCity, a continuous integration (CI) server used internally and for building products.
[19:50] The concept of a safe merge.
[21:11] JetBrains Toolbox.
[21:53] How Maarten compartmentalizes tests.
[24:44] Static analysis tools for code quality and customization.
[27:38] Duplicate code identifier.
[30:41] VS Code.
[32:13] What are some interesting things to look out for in the future?
Mentioned in this Episode:
Clear Measure Way
Architect Forum
Software Engineer Forum
Programming with Palermo — New Video Podcast! Email us at [email protected].
Clear Measure, Inc. (Sponsor)
.NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon!
Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events!
Maarten’s Blog
Rider
Resharper
Building a .NET IDE with JetBrains Rider
NDepend
Visual Studio for Mac Retirement Announcement
.NET Annotated Monthly — Sept 2023
Want to Learn More?
Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
377 Listeners
272 Listeners
244 Listeners
283 Listeners
153 Listeners
40 Listeners
624 Listeners
202 Listeners
142 Listeners
982 Listeners
484 Listeners
189 Listeners
181 Listeners
63 Listeners
140 Listeners