What type of programmers does Hashnode mostly consist of?
Game Development using Unity on Android but soon it will expand to iOS :)
Using React Native for my own project because I want to try mobile development.
Web Development, Ruby On Rails
Used to work on VB.NET for 5 Years. but from one year i'm learning and developing using ROR.
Game development, cross-platform apps for 10 years.
Switched focus to developer operations, MVC frameworks (goodbye artist drama!). Been doing this for 2 years. Part of this gig requires API development.
Planning on destroying JIRA (my PM nemesis), so gearing up to tackle full-stack web development and build an MVP.
Here are Mine
Most of my work has been within the .NET, NodeJS and python space.
Other: ERP development in Dynamics AX (2012).
Programming Languages i use daily; X++, C# .NET, T-SQL
I automate business transactions (financial and logistics).
This involves;
I have been working on the following from past 7 years of now
1, 4, 6, 9, 11, 15 (writing services like distributed job scheduler and such) and 6 is a hobby not really a profession of mine.
One thing I am not sure of -> does database development mean active database development or knowing and using different database systems ? because if it's the later i could add is well
Desktop as well if writing java applications with swing counts ;D ... anyhow ...
I mostly do api dev and db dev.I love creating api's.
Mostly web developer, but i want to learn something about native development (react native) and some FP (clojure) and some Go :)
I have been mostly working on web development (backend/frontend) in javascript and ruby, for startups (previously) and enterprises (now).
My work also ends up involving some degree of infrastructure tooling (AWS deplyments, AWS data pipeline management, coudformation orchestration, Node microservices and bridging with legacy services). I currently work as an infrastructure team member for a finance firm and facilitate tooling and custom framework support to different business units.
I am currently exploring more in the fields of real time services, system architecture and data visualization and reporting.
1. Web Development
More specifically, I specialize in responsive web design.
I went to college for Graphic Design, which we always looked at as design that serves a purpose. Designers spend a lot of time thinking about 'scalable' designs and design systems - finding ways to make many different pieces for the same client look like a cohesive set that all match.
Web design is the natural extension of graphic design, and responsive design is like designing a scalable layout and design system within one document that can change sizes!
Imagine trying to create a document like a resume that needs to fit on a piece of paper as small as a business card, but also possibly be displayed the size of a post card, sheet of paper, or even a poster. How do you make use of all that extra space? How should the design adapt, and what kind of adaptations would feel 'wrong' for the layout?
I do a lot of research and experiments with finding new ways to express these layout adaptations, hoping that the web designers of the future will have a much more expressive set of tools to work with when building layouts.
It's a very exciting field to be in, and a very exciting time to be in this field as well!
I'm mostly doing Web Development (been doing it from the start of my professional career) and Desktop Application Development. Aside from that I'm playing with my side projects in Game Development, iOS Application Development, Android Application Development (Hybrid Mobile Development) and for some time now I'm experimenting with VR/WebVR, Augmented Reality and Robotics.
I started with Web Development in my university years, more specifically Front-End Development. At that time I was working in a call-center. In my space time, I was learning and reading everything I could, from random tutorials to full MOOC courses. That's the time when I finished my first projects, followed by many sleepless nights. After a year/year and a half I was able to find a job as a Front-End Developer. It was like a miracle came true.
As I gained experience, my interests shifted a bit. I started experimenting with different technologies, playing with new web APIs and frameworks. This led to last year's job change - I started working for a company that makes middleware for game UIs using Web technologies (HTML, CSS and JS). This more or less introduced me to the wonderful world of Game Development (Windows, Linux and iOS, both Mobile and Desktop), Unreal Engine, Unity, etc. My daily duties are still related to Web Development, but in a completely different environment than the browser.
And as our company is involved in game development, we just can't ignore VR and AR. We are already working on some great projects, soon to be released and an Open Source tool that will greatly benefit the VR gaming community.
I'm experimenting with WebVR a lot lately, as it promised to be a revolutionary technology.
Also I'm interested in WebAssembly and I've been following the development process closely. Now that it reached the Browser Preview milestone I'll definitely invest some time exploring its capabilities.
Other than that I have some small toy projects, build with React Native and Cordova. They are a proof-of-concept ideas I had and wanted to see happen. I jump to them from time to time, mostly when I'm tired from regular web development (this is a great way to prevent burnouts).
P.S This discussion reminds me that we are missing multi-select polls. Sandeep Panda :)
Most experience with Back-End Web using .NET stack... However, I am shifting my career into InfoSec right now and I am far more interested in C level network programming, systems programming, and reverse engineering, which I've been working on in my spare time :)
Started programming over 30 years ago :) So let's skip early years, webmastering, IT Project management, general IT management and earlier technologies mostly on MS platform and focus only on last 3 years:
Thanks guys for your answers :)
For me I am a newbie developer, started with some small desktop apps in Python, but now I am fully concentrating on Android development.
I professionally do web development, iOS/Android apps, WinCE applications for scanners and a bit of desktop application development. Since that's a lot, I am thankful that I can do Android and iOS development with Cordova! In my free time, I also create a game (Linux/Win) and work on security stuff (which I even study at the moment and it might become important for work). I'm interested in OS development (Redox, to be precise), but I just don't have the time. Things will change a bit for me, as I am in the transition phase from one department into another at my full-time job. However, as far as I can see, that will only remove WinCE and desktop development from the list (which I am not particularly sad about).
After being a half-student, half-regular for three years (during which I also did a bit of freelancing), I've been working for over two years professionally. That's not an awful lot of time, however I am the only one with certain skills in my department, so they gave me a great variety of tasks and responsibilities, of which about have are directly production relevant. I had to grow and accustom fast, and I am very thankful for the trust they put into a beginner, like me :)
I have done
Amir Anwar
Python and Android developer
Tommy Hodgins
CSS & Element Queries
Marco Alka
Software Engineer, Technical Consultant & Mentor
Maximilian Berkmann
Web and programming
This post should be a poll.
Anyway, the fields I'm working in are: