All I seem to do is fix css bugs on tech debt, on 60% of clients
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Frontend - all encompasing bordom
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Originally posted by KentDogWalker View PostAll I seem to do is fix css bugs on tech debt, on 60% of clients
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/...ion-in-notepad
if you do it more than once consider automating it. Better pay, better quality & better life!Last edited by vetran; 30 December 2021, 13:15.Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much. -
Originally posted by vetran View Post
so lots of well paid niche work then. Can you script it? Find the bug signatures in the code & either highlight or replace. Do it in < 1/3 of the time but charge for full time.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/...ion-in-notepad
if you do it more than once consider automating it. Better pay, better quality & better life!merely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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Originally posted by eek View Post
css bugs are always trial and error to fix because the bug is often not where it seems to be - it's the div next door that is the issue.
Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.Comment
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Originally posted by eek View Post
css bugs are always trial and error to fix because the bug is often not where it seems to be - it's the div next door that is the issue.Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ hereComment
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Originally posted by TwoWolves View PostThis is why I only work with the "back-end".Comment
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Originally posted by KentDogWalker View Post
yeah I think its time to switch to that, mostly legacy , even 1-2 year codebases, are css nightmaresAlways forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.Comment
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I got kind of shoved into the front end basket by chance when the industry started drawing the distinction in the mid-2000s - it just so happened that I was mainly doing that stuff at the time, and I thus ended up stuck with it for a while. I still think CSS is great, but it's sufficiently complex now with things like flexbox and grid that it needs to be regarded as a specialism in its own right. And the flood of JS developers who want to make everything an SPA but don't even know how to write semantic HTML makes a lot of things intolerable to work on.
I've been mainly Python/Django, with front end stuff done as needed (and semantically marked-up, and without relying on JavaScript for things that can be done purely in HTML and CSS), for the past few years. The relief is tremendousComment
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