To gradually switch our product from AngularJS to Angular
It#s too big to just switch the whole thing to Angular, also because there's still hella business logic in there, but fuck AngularJS so we're doing it gradually.
oh the feature itself is postponed anywy, because another team fucked up. We should get data from their library and display it basically. Turns out the data isn't passed with the result dataset from the library yet.
there is very little you gain by exploiting weird shit to combine two frameworks to work well with each other to do a transition for which you wil probably have to write a shit ton of code to make it work properly
the "integration-code" is mostly just the upgrade adapter
the actual component is gonna be all angular
Also I expect the whole upgrading-to-angular thing to take at least half a year, if not a whole year or more. Depends on 1) customers, 2) other integration projects pushed by CEO and 3) other teams getting their shit together so we can finally kick out their backwards-ass libraries.
(#2 is actually an awesome project so it's not jsut the CEO pushing)
#2 and #3 are basically backend upgrade to netcore
Also everything is aimed to remove business logic from our product and shove it into the other teams' backends.
The direction we're going with ou product is pretty great right now, once it all gets rolling.
@Wietlol I'm hopeful though, since the main point slowly shifted from "we need 100% feature completion" to "we need a modern architecture", since building new features is kinda complicated at this point.
asp.net, .NET Framework 4.0, aspx sites, one giant library behind it that has hte same name as the company and "can do everything". It was once a great idea.
We're supposed to have next to no business logic, only using the libraries provided by module-teams.
So far we're kinda modular: We could pretty easily integrate a new module (or submodule, those modules technically have submodules kinda).
Also for our main customers, all the modules belong together. It's like one product cut into four so we could have seperate teams with seperate release cicles.
Well, because of the libraries we're using, we can't upgrade to netcore. Literally the only reason.
Also because the module-teams didnt properly seperate their frontends from their logic in the libraries, we had to put much logic in our own backend. So we often have stuff to build that included business logic, which includes correctly using the libraries.
And we're all on servers running WinServ2012 (or, like, 2 servers even 2k8), not really seperated. One goal is to have the teams take their stuff to their servers at the moment, so we can handle our servers without having to check which modules are going offline too if we reboot something.
And once we're on netcore, we can just shove everything in docker and on a cluster. PoC is already functional, we just need to go netcore.
It's gonna be amazing.
Rolling updates. Zero downtime. Quicker release cycled. Fewer features = fewer bugs per cycle.
Independent release cycles. No more "hey guys we need a release candidate library until thursday".
Different topic: I have like 9€ in Google Play Credit from google rewards. What do I do with that? I already got the premium versions of the apps I'm using. I don't need google music/video/books, those needs are all fulfilled elsewhere.
What kind of apps do you guys use on your phone beside the usual reddit/<socialMedia>/<messenger> ?
i have an app on a server in IIS - i want windows auth, which works on my local machine when debugging. but on the server it just shows me a username that i think is associated with the app pool
how do i make it pick up the current authenticated user???
i have windows auth set as true in the IIS authentication settings