Write better Angular. AngularJS course offering at Interface school
3,000 line controllers, no unit tests, copy and pasted error handling. If you're a developer, this is probably not foreign to you. We've all done it. Whether it's a weekend project you're not putting much effort in to or a project at work with constraints outside of your control (money, time, etc), we have probably done some variation of these "anti-patterns".
Intermediate web developers are welcome to attend my Angular Fundamentals 4-hour workshop. I say intermediate because I'll expect everyone to at least have heard of Angular and be able to write "Hello World" before hand. Some level of JavaScript knowledge is also preferred. The course itself will focus on some real problems and their solutions that attendees can take with them to apply immediately in their everyday work. I'll be teaching the course in person at Interface's facility in Omaha.
In a previous job, I served as the Angular support person for Union Pacific and helped write their reusable UI component framework in Angular. In that role I experienced different applications and problems of all shapes and sizes. A handful of those patterns and problems repeated themselves. Using those common pitfalls and anti-patterns, I've created a workshop that will tackle each problem individually and provide solutions to take home for later use. The course will include a short overview of Angular to refresh everyone, an overview of what's new in Angular 1.3 (and how that can help you), and also a "legacy project" that I've tried to load with problems that we will refactor as a group. As software developers, it'd be nice if we could start with a blank page or new project every time we wanted to try something new but in reality this often isn't the case (unless you're a weekend warrior).
To learn more and to register for the November 6 class check it out here. All students will have reference materials to take home and apply in their everyday lives. I’ll see you there!