Likes: | reactjs react-redux linux node.js javascript functional-programming |
I was the primary developer on a team that developed a tool to collect information from select social media influencers to help connect them with marketing campaigns.
Continuing my work from Courseload, in November I finished a year long conversion from CoffeeScript/Backbone/Marionette to ES6/React. This caused our deployed JS to reduce from 3.2 MB to 830KB, leading to faster load times.
Unizin is a consortium for higher education committed to developing solutions to problems common to all member schools. I lead the front end team working on applications we have created for use by member schools. The main tools we use for building are React with Redux. One of our applications, Course Development Suite, is built on top of Nuxeo. We have recently started a few new projects building LTI applications for use with Canvas.
One of my main responsibilities has been designing the client-side architecture for our applications. I also evaluate new tools and libraries for our use before launching to the rest of the team.
In 2013 we had a typical jQuery, DOM Spaghetti app in need of a rewrite. When I joined, we began the process of rewriting the app using Backbone and Marionette. I found this provided enough structure to organize the code without getting too strict.
We typically wrote in CoffeeScript, which transpiles to Javascript. I decided since that was my everyday language here, I needed to contribute to CoffeeLint, as it didn’t do everything I wanted. After several of my pull requests were accepted by CoffeeLint, I was made a contributor so I could commit and build releases on my own. When I joined, CoffeeLint was a couple of large files that were sometimes hard to follow (as all code becomes). I extracted everything into modules, including each of the core rules. Then I added a mechanism to allow 3rd parties to publish rules.
For several months, I’d been reading/watching everything I could on ReactJS. I was impressed with React’s claim that you can start out integrating small pieces. I wrote a Backbone View that wraps around a React Component and tried out having a React component in our app. I found this UI code was much easier to follow than our existing Backbone code. Once I implemented central data stores (Flux), everything became even more straight forward to follow. We then had a path laid out where we would incrementally reimplement the most common parts of the UI in React.
Since using React with JSX with ES2015 (ES6) transpilers, I’ve moved away from CoffeeScript and have been writing new code in ES6.
In July 2015, Unizin purchased Courseload's technology and hired some of the people, myself included.
With recent projects I've been moving from PHP driven sites assisted by Javascript, to building Javascript applications working against a REST API. I've been researching and experimenting with Hypermedia APIs, but haven't used it in any client projects yet.
A client who sells network cameras needed their customer facing device management application rebuilt. Symfony was chosen as the framework to build on. We used Trello to keep track of everything that needed to be done and when. The client was able to join our Trello board adding/answering questions and monitoring the progress of the project. In the end we delivered a completely new management interface available in english and french that is compatible with the thousands of devices already out in the field.
When I arrived we used SVN, but have since decided to migrate to git and add a Continuous Integration server (Jenkins). SVN standards had not previously been enforced, so SVN repositories often held many unrelated projects claiming to be "branches". I sorted all of it out and did a complete migration of all SVN projects into git repos hosted on BitBucket.
Build or fix custom software based on client's needs.
Most of the software has been a form of LAMP with a varying stack. One project required a cross platform mobile application. That was built using Symfony2 to host the server API and to serve as the build environment for the HTML, Javascript, and CSS that gets exported to be compiled into a PhoneGap application. The Javascript stack included RequireJS, BackboneJS, jQuery, and jQuery Mobile. Using Symfony2 gave me a consistent environment to build modular code that got compressed into a single HTML file, two CSS files, and one Javascript file.
For some clients we also setup and manage the servers. I have had to configure PHP, Apache (rewrite rules, virtualhosts, SSL), FTP, users, MySQL, SSMTP. As Linux has been my primary OS at work and home for over 6 years, I’ve also become very fast at troubleshooting.
The team I work on maintains a PHP application that manages all aspects of payday loans. It's used by hundreds of call center agents and manages about 100-125 requests per second all day.
We used to use GForge with SVN for issue management and version control. I researched alternatives and converted all historical data to Jira and Mercurial. Jira's import doesn't natively support GForge, so I had to use the CSV import to get some of the data and then build a series of scripts to access both APIs to import comments, attachments and more.
I work on a team that maintains payday loan management software.
In addition to the usual software maintenance, I like to find ways I can increase my productivity. For instance, we have to enter our time for individual tasks into a cumbersome web interface that sometimes took me 20 minutes to enter my time at the end of the day. I decided to use a time tracking program throughout the day and wrote a script that would export my time, and a greasemonkey script that would enter my time into our web interface within seconds.
I worked on a team that maintained a custom version of ViciDial, an in-house call center application, and an Asterisk install.
The phone system we used before Asterisk was very cumbersome to set up IVRs, so my largest project was to build IVRs for Asterisk. We needed them to be easy to write and maintain. They also needed to be able to make web service calls to integrate with our other software. We didn't find anything that suited our needs, so I built a VoiceXML parser that plugged into Asterisk's AGI interface in PHP.
I was later moved to a team where I helped maintain a different call center program that manages all aspects of payday loans. This team was branched off into a new company called FiTech.
I wrote programs to assist in managing servers and desktops. For desktops I wrote and distributed Auto-It scripts that would automate tasks normally performed by IT like installing or configuring software.
I managed our file/web/mail/domain servers. Part of this involved planning and implementing a migration from Microsoft Exchange to a Postfix mail server. There were some open source scripts to do little pieces of this migration, but all had to be tweaked and many had to be written myself.
I worked as desktop support helping anyone in the company that has a problem with technology. This ranged from resetting passwords to helping someone learn how to use Microsoft Word to create a mail merge document. I planned and implemented a migration of about 40 computers from Windows XP/2000 to Fedora Core 6.
My main responsibilities were to troubleshoot hardware and software, remove spyware/viruses, and build PHP based applications.
My largest project was to build a web based work order program that works on a LAMP server. Instead of filling out a paper form, now customers fill out a form with their information and a description of what needs to be fixed at a kiosk. This eliminated issues we had been experiencing where we couldn't read people's description of the problem, or we couldn't read their phone number to tell them their computer is fixed. All work was logged in this new system to automate billing.
With the new system in place we could:
1.Generate a work order ID when the customer drops off the computer
2.Give the customer a receipt to take home
3.Automatically keep track of the tech's billable hours.
I worked on building utilities to help IT staff and teachers. I used VB6 and Access databases. My main program was a grade book program that integrated with the school's existing student database. Over the two years I spent developing and supporting the grade book, I learned how to interact with customers and provide support.
During the summers, I worked as a computer technician doing things like setting up computer labs and removing spyware and viruses from the computers.
An Atom plugin that provides a limited jump-to-definition for plain JavaScript. A complete jump-to-definition can't be built reliably without type annotations like Flow and TypeScript.
Linter plugin for CoffeeScript, using coffeelint.
I reworked the project to require CoffeeLint as a library instead of trying to call out to some commandline somewhere. This fixed several issues that were open at the time and configuration done for the project, not for the editor.
Lint your CoffeeScript.
I've been the primary maintainer for the last 2 years. One of my biggest contributions was to split the rules into modules which paved the way for supporting 3rd party rules.
Atom doesn't have a native "jump to definition" mechanism, so I decided to build one. code-links ships with a Javascript parser, but any developer can add support for other languages. coffee-links is one such plugin.
coffee-links is a plugin I wrote for code-links. It lets me jump through calls to require()
This is a Symfony2 Bundle that will allow your application to authenticate against Atlassian Crowd and works with Single Sign On.
ItemAuditor is a World of Warcraft addon that keeps track of all item costs to assist in successfully playing the auction house.
When I was playing WoW I found it difficult to keep track of exactly how much I spent on all of my items. I read that many people used spreadsheets, but I decided to automate the entire process and started ItemAuditor.
This was my first Lua project and became fairly successful. Before I quit playing WoW, and being able to maintain ItemAuditor, the last release had over 4,000 downloads.
First Computer: | 100mhz Pentium with 24MB RAM |
Favorite Editor: | Atom |