active questions tagged lonedeveloper - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-11-29T15:42:05Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/lonedeveloper http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/138621/best-version-control-for-lone-developer 33 Best Version control for lone developer Stephen 2008-09-26T10:20:21Z 2009-11-23T08:49:26Z <p>I'm a lone developer at the moment; please share you experiences on what is a good VC setup for a lone developer. </p> <p>My constraints are; </p> <ul> <li>I work on multiple machines and need to keep them synced up </li> <li>Sometimes I work offline </li> </ul> <p>I'm currently using Subversion(just the client to a remote server), and that is working ok. I'm interested in mecurial and git DVCS, but none of their use-cases make sense to my situation.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/882575/bare-minimum-for-an-independent-developer 8 Bare minimum for an independent developer geocoin 2009-05-19T12:52:54Z 2009-11-06T23:59:59Z <p>I'm currently in the planning stages of starting out on my own* (with a business partner...) and am trying to come up with a list of minimum requirements that I'll need for the early stages of this venture.</p> <p>Leaving out the business craft side of things (sales marketing etc.) at this point - there are plenty of articles here on SO covering that - and focusing on the technical side of things only, I have the following list:</p> <ul> <li><p>development box (obviously! PC or MAC depending on target platform) </p></li> <li><p>dev software (VStudio/eclipse/xcode/notepad) </p></li> <li><p>test box (could be virtual machine)</p></li> <li><p>Source control (anything except VSS!)</p></li> <li><p>onsite backup (external HDD, separate backup box, CD/DVD ROM)</p></li> <li><p>offsite backup(looking for suggestions here amazon S3?)</p></li> <li><p>teleconferencing software (for discussion with Biz partner who may not be local. Skype?)</p></li> <li><p>bug tracking/management (fogbugz?)</p></li> </ul> <p>Have i missed anything and/or included too much? I realize that every venture is different, and technically, the bare minimum is just a dev box and a chair... however assuming serious work with disaster recovery is in order, is this list reasonable?</p> <p>[EDIT] I've created a wiki summary of the answers. I've put the skeleton framework in and intend to fatten it up with links and details etc. Once I can, it will be the accepted answer, in the meantime please vote up the other answers and/or edit the wiki page if you think it's appropriate. BTW, I'm away for a few days so the fattening up will take place after that.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1463348/what-kind-of-software-development-process-should-a-lone-developer-have 15 What kind of software development process should a lone developer have? Purple Tentacle 2009-09-23T00:29:35Z 2009-09-23T01:48:22Z <p>I work as a lone developer in a very small company. My work is quite chaotic and I'm looking for ways to make it more organized.</p> <p>One problem is that my projects have practically no management. Rarely anyone asks me what I'm doing, or if I have any problems. At some point there was talk about weekly status meetings, but that's some time ago. Seems that if I'd want something like that, I would have to arrange those myself.. Sometimes I'm a bit lost on what I should do next because I don't have tasks or a clear schedule defined.</p> <p>From books and articles I have found many things that might be helpful. Like having a good coding standard (there exists only a rough style guide which is somewhat outdated in my opinion), code inspections, TDD, unit testing, bug database... But in a small company it seems there are no resources or time for anything that's not essential. The fact that I work in the embedded domain seems to make things only more complicated.</p> <p>I feel there's also a custom of cutting corners and doing quick hacks on short notice. This leads to unfinished and unprofessional products and bugs waiting to emerge at a later date. I would imagine they are also a pain to maintain. So, I'm about to inherit a challenging code base, doing new development that requires learning a lot of new things and I guess trying to build a process for it all at the same time. It might be rewarding in the end, but as not too experienced I'm not sure if I can pull it off.</p> <p>In a small shop like this the environment is far from optimal for programming. There's many other things needed to be done occasionally like customer support, answering the phone, signing parcels, hardware testing, assembly and whatever miscellaneous tasks might appear. So you get the idea about the resources. It's not all bad (sometimes it's enlightening to solve some customer problems) and I believe it can be improved, but it's the other things that I'm really concerned.</p> <p>Is it possible to have a development process in a place like this?</p> <p>Would it help to have some sort of management? What kind of?</p> <p>Is it possible to make quality products with small resources?</p> <p>How do I convince myself and others that the company which has worked successfully for decades needs to change? What would be essential?</p> <p>Maybe there's someone working in a similar shop?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/43587/tips-for-a-lone-developer-not-a-lonely-developer 41 Tips for a lone developer (not a lonely developer) Matt Warren 2008-09-04T12:11:56Z 2009-08-21T11:23:10Z <p>I'm the only developer in the (small) company that I work for, although I'm fortunate that my boss is very technical. What tips do other people in a similar situation have. </p> <p>I'm wondering about how you handle some of the following issues:</p> <ul> <li>getting advice and mentoring (from a person)</li> <li>not having another coder to run a solution past</li> <li>developing in a vacumn, i.e. not meeting other developers</li> <li>having no one to tell you if your idea/solution is rubbish</li> <li>no one being as geeky as you!!</li> </ul> <p>I'm not really looking for pointers to technical/on-line resources, I'm looking for practical suggestions. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/277208/how-should-i-use-mercurial-as-a-lone-developer 30 How should I use Mercurial as a lone developer? Jay Bazuzi 2008-11-10T06:34:03Z 2009-03-03T14:20:57Z <p>I've decided that I want to use Mercurial for a small, personal project. </p> <p>Most of the help I've read about it talks about merging changes between multiple users. Since I'm solo, that's not going to happen.</p> <p>Should I have multiple repositories? My development computer is already backed up nightly to my Windows Home Server, so it doesn't seem valuable to have a second repository elsewhere just for backup purposes.</p> <p>Should I be branching every day? Or just around releases? Or when?</p> <p>In general, what practices do you recommend for the lone developer using Mercurial?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/322542/feeling-trapped-to-the-job 3 Feeling trapped to the job [closed] anon 2008-11-26T23:34:07Z 2008-11-27T01:21:31Z <p>I work in a very small company as the only programmer and while there are lot of challenges and new things for me to learn now, I fear that one day it will become a dead end situation. I already now feel that if I would leave, it would put the company in a tough situation as they would have to find a new coder and familiarize him to the products. Lack of local job opportunities and being a novice doesn't help not to feel grateful of the job.</p> <p>So, how to not feel in-expendable and take pressure from it? (I know I'm not really)</p> <p>How to not be overly loyal to the employer?</p> <p>How to not feel that job perks are a burden that ties you to the job?</p> <p>If an opportunity of a lifetime came by, could you resign without blinking an eye or am I the only one to think like this?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/218507/suggestions-please-for-a-home-version-control-system 5 Suggestions please for a home version control system endian 2008-10-20T13:54:07Z 2008-10-26T10:09:05Z <p>I have a home project that really needs to be in Source Control. I tried installing Subversion, which I have some experience with, but couldn't get it working. I don't particularly want to use SourceSafe. I'm a bit nervous about Git/Mercury as being somewhat cryptic, although this is only based on opinion rather than my experience.</p> <p>Main requirements are:</p> <ol> <li>Must be open source (well, it needs to be free but that sounds a bit cheap!)</li> <li>Must run on Win32</li> <li>Would prefer a GUI interface if one is available</li> </ol> <p>Many thanks in advance!</p> <p><strong>edit:</strong> Just to let you all know, I installed VisualSVN and had it working in no time. Thanks for the great advice.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/131282/would-it-make-sense-to-use-version-control-if-im-the-only-developer 8 Would it make sense to use version control if I'm the only developer? [closed] __ 2008-09-25T03:13:33Z 2008-09-25T05:46:25Z <p>For example, if I was doing a project at home, does it make sense to use version control in the event that I want to revert or whatever, or does the shadow copy feature of Vista (we'll assume I'm using Vista) accomplish the same thing?</p>