This session goes into integrating the open source Doomsday Console with your workflow to enhance the way you, the developer, interact with your application at run-time, and give you an improved perspective on the impact of your code as it executes.
If you ever toyed around with the developer console in any video games and thought it was rad times, this one is for you.
If you didn't, you may still find yourself surprised at just how liberating it can be to have a trace window you can talk back to.
Game developers may be particularly interested in this one.
by Stray
Your developer toolchain doesn't begin with your choice of IDE, it starts with you: specifically your brain.
Whether you've never heard of Robotlegs or Dependency Injection, or you're comfy with Robotlegs 1, this session will expand your understanding of:
- how your own process works,
- why changing practices is hard,
- the pros and cons of frameworks,
- the ups and downs of automated DI,
- the architectural patterns behind Robotlegs,
- how we used our collective brains to create Robotlegs 2,
- and how you can get the best from (est release autumn 2011) Robotlegs 2.
Guaranteed brain-friendly and jargon-free, this session is also relevant to anyone who releases libraries to the community, or wants to.