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by treehau5
3500 days ago
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> To be a devil's advocate: That's true, but still it's the last 10% that is hard when using a well-known framework, compared to 100% when you handcraft everything in a basement. I am saying they are about the same. The last 10% is about as much work as bootstrapping a specific solution. The new junior dev point is irrelevant if you stick to plain vanilla javascript, and hire junior devs that actually know javascript. Your devs should know how to read code and tests. > otherwise, you need to write a ton of documentation and/or devote hours per week on support, at the times when you have the least will to do that. No I don't. Junior dev: "hey how does this work?"
Me: "Did you run the tests?" |
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