Copying code is exactly the opposite of DRY lol
Any of Paul Sellers books: https://paulsellers.com/paul-sellers-books/
Essential woodworking hand tools is a super thorough look at hand tools, their uses, sharpening and care etc. Sounds like it's what you're looking for.
P.s. his YouTube videos are amazing, he pretty much got me into hand tool woodworking by himself.
When I had to fix a bug, I made sure not to just fix the problem, but to understand it.
There's a massive difference between the two. When I was a junior I would often find out how to fix a problem by googling and trying different things until something worked, but I wouldn't understand why.
Then I started digging into what was actually going on under the hood and finding out the why of things - sometimes it was to do with a framework, sometimes a language, sometimes it reveals a fault in yours or someone else's programming.
But every single time you learn something new and it solidifies your knowledge of your tech stack and programming in general.
Also, one of the best phrases I've ever heard in programming is "every bug is a missing test" - these days the first thing I do with a bug is write a test to expose the bad behaviour - then you can go about fixing it with confidence and preventing regression errors.
Yup all valid points. And I find Nuget to be a heaps less painful package manager than other ecosystems
React / TypeScript / Vite (sometimes Redux) for the front end, C# .net / SQL for the backend..
Fast-ish to get up and running, scales to a medium-large project with minimal headaches
Drills etc, wrenches, screwdrivers, saws.. I'm working out of a single car garage so I want to get everything up on a wall to save space and make common stuff more accessible..
Inspired by a recent post, I'll also post my plane till - made out of cheap pine from the local big box store & some scrap plywood I had hanging around.. planes are held in place with some rare earth magnets, seems to work well!
Now I need to keep cracking on with more tool holders to organise my workshop..
I think that's just perspective, it's far closer to the camera
Stick with it. Programming takes a long time to learn - and I don't mean the fundamentals; I mean there's so much to the job that just takes experience to pick up.
After a while, you can pick up a problem/feature, dive into a code base and instead of becoming lost, things just slide into place in your brain and you can focus on the problem/feature rather than having a whole bunch of non essential stuff stuck in your head.
And the secret to getting there is simply wanting to understand. Don't be satisfied with knowing that you fixed a problem, make sure you understand why your fix worked. Don't sweat the bigger picture, just focus on each task. And get good at debugging early, that helps soooo much.
Good luck homie
That's great and thanks for sharing, my wife has the same moral stance, I'm gonna be using this!