Swift 2 Error Handling: From Objective-C to Swift and Back — iOS & Swift Development Notes — Medium
How to handle errors in pure Swift and hybrid Swift/Objective-C projects Source: Swift 2 Error Handling: From Objective-C to Swift and Back — iOS & Swift Development Notes — Medium
New Manager Resources « Accidentally in Code
A collection of some of the things I’ve found most helpful for becoming a manager. Source: New Manager Resources « Accidentally in Code
Introducing d3-shape — Medium
Regardless of the approach you chose, to implement your tool, you’ll need to actually draw something to the screen. And that means generating geometric shapes that represent data. Source: Introducing d3-shape — Medium
Choosing an HTTP Status Code — Stop Making It Hard | Racksburg
What complicates matters is that the official HTTP/1.1 guidelines — the RFC — was originally written in 1997.† That’s the year you went surfing the cyberweb in Netscape Navigator on your 33.6kbps modem. It’s a little like trying to apply Sun Tzu’s Art of War to modern business strategy. Timeless advice, to be sure, but […]
Charting in Mobile Apps | shinobicontrols whitepaper
Today we’re thrilled to announce the launch of our brand new white paper; Style and Substance in Mobile Retail Banking: charting in mobile apps. Source: Charting in Mobile Apps | shinobicontrols whitepaper
kean/Nuke
Advanced Swift framework for loading, processing, caching, displaying and preheating images. Source: kean/Nuke
Node Interactive Debugging Node.js In Production
Example: Building a Carthage framework that depends on another Carthage framework
Sample project: https://github.com/shsteven/MagicalAPI
Maker’s Schedule, Manager’s Schedule
There are two types of schedule, which I’ll call the manager’s schedule and the maker’s schedule. The manager’s schedule is for bosses. It’s embodied in the traditional appointment book, with each day cut into one hour intervals. You can block off several hours for a single task if you need to, but by default you […]
The Next Feature Fallacy: The fallacy that the next new feature will suddenly make people use your product at andrewchen
A few weeks ago, I read this tweet, and found myself nodding my head in vigorous agreement. The Next Feature Fallacy: the fallacy that the next feature you add will suddenly make people want to use the entire product. — Joshua Porter (@bokardo) May 14, 2015 For people who love to build product, when something’s […]