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Aside from basic competence in the base language and the key technologies which might be assumed (although shouldn't be taken for granted):

  • Platform - no good attempting to has develop an ASP.NET application on for a server that doesn't support .NET, no good attempting to provide a SQL Server database to be hosted on a MySQL Server... etc.
  • Deadline/Budget - Does it need to be done by next week ?
  • Budget - i.e. and therefore potentially has lots of potential quick hacks and workarounds vs. coding to strict standards and doing everything the right way(rather than the quick or down and dirty way).
  • Content - who is providing it? has it been vetted for quality and approved for publication? Have all applicable copyrights been checked? etc
  • Team/Stakeholders - Who needs to be kept in the loop for development, who will the developer be working with, who do they need to keep happy? etc. Will there be a designer or is the developer the designer too? Don't hire a top notch developer and assume their design skills are all that - most of them are not. I get by and can make something that looks reasonably professional, but I wouldn't consider myself a designer even by a long stretch of the imagination.
  • Target Audience - savvy, not-savvy, intranet, internet. Make no assumptions here, there's a great quote that goes "Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning."
  • Hardware Base - how much performance has/have the host machine(s) got? Do we have to be concerned about limited memory/diskspace/resources? Obviously if it's only got a small amount of memory, then we need to make sure that minimal memory resources are used in the design of our application. Likewise for diskspace etc.
  • Platform - overall architectural/network topology
  • Maintenance - who will be maintaining this product? If the maintenance crew all have a VB background and haven't the first clue about PHP or C#, don't write it in those languages!! If the maintenance crew is you, then code in whatever you're most comfortable in.

This is all before you even get to a web environment really. Once you get into a web environment you would really expect them to understand (in no particular order):

  • Stateless interfaces
  • Web protocols (HTTP/HTTPS/FTP) etc
  • JavaScript and/or other relevant client-side coding techniques
  • Various Persistence techniques - Cookies, Sessions, ViewState, ObjectState (and/or any others that relate to the APIs being used)
  • At least a basic understanding of HTTP handlers and how they do their job
  • Page Lifecycle
  • Security in web environments - XSS, SQL Injection, Session hijacking etc etc.

After that:

  • Competence in the language used to develop the site
  • Knowledge of standards and best practices and an ability to apply them effectively
  • A good understanding of Cross browser techniques and hacks
  • CSS techniques and standards (if the developer is expected to design too)
  • Understanding of various browsers and their idiosynchrosies and workarounds

And then - if your site is data driven

  • An understanding of the database technologies to be used
  • RDBMS design and performance tuning if you're asking them to design the underlying database. If you've got a DBA for that, then this is not such a major concern.
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Aside from basic competence in the base language and the key technologies which might be assumed (although shouldn't be taken for granted):

  • Platform - no good attempting to has an ASP.NET application on a server that doesn't support .NET, no good attempting to provide a SQL Server database to be hosted on a MySQL Server... etc.
  • Deadline - Does it need to be done by next week?
  • Budget - i.e. lots of potential workarounds vs. coding to strict standards and doing everything the right way (rather than the quick or down and dirty way).
  • Content - who is providing it? has it been vetted for quality and approved for publication? Have all applicable copyrights been checked? etc
  • Team/Stakeholders - Who needs to be kept in the loop for development, who will the developer be working with, who do they need to keep happy? etc. Will there be a designer or is the developer the designer too? Don't hire a top notch developer and assume their design skills are all that - most of them are not. I get by and can make something that looks reasonably professional, but I wouldn't consider myself a designer even by a long stretch of the imagination.
  • Target Audience - savvy, not-savvy, intranet, internet. Make no assumptions here, there's a great quote that goes "Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning."
  • Hardware Base - how much performance has/have the host machine(s) got? Do we have to be concerned about limited memory/diskspace/resources? Obviously if it's only got a small amount of memory, then we need to make sure that minimal memory resources are used in the design of our application. Likewise for diskspace etc.
  • Platform - overall architectural/network topology
  • Maintenance - who will be maintaining this product? If the maintenance crew all have a VB background and haven't the first clue about PHP or C#, don't write it in those languages!! If the maintenance crew is you, then code in whatever you're most comfortable in.

This is all before you even get to a web environment really. Once you get into a web environment you would really expect them to understand (in no particular order):

  • Stateless interfaces
  • Web protocols (HTTP/HTTPS/FTP) etc
  • JavaScript and/or other relevant client-side coding techniques
  • Various Persistence techniques - Cookies, Sessions, ViewState, ObjectState (and/or any others that relate to the APIs being used)
  • At least a basic understanding of HTTP handlers and how they do their job
  • Page Lifecycle
  • Security in web environments - XSS, SQL Injection, Session hijacking etc etc.

After that:

  • Competence in the language used to develop the site
  • Knowledge of standards and best practices and an ability to apply them effectively
  • A good understanding of Cross browser techniques and hacks
  • CSS techniques and standards (if the developer is expected to design too)
  • Understanding of various browsers and their idiosynchrosies and workarounds

And then - if your site is data driven

  • An understanding of the database technologies to be used
  • RDBMS design and performance tuning if you're asking them to design the underlying database. If you've got a DBA for that, then this is not such a major concern.
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