NVIM is NOT easy, neither is RUST and artful coding is damn near impossible. I love it. - Personally, I consider myself very much a beginner within the software development sector. Not timewise, ofcourse, as I have over a decade within the field. Instead, in terms of skills. There is always so much to learn and it proves every harder to keep pace with those that push the limits of human condition within the boundaries of software development. None the less, I try! Even failing 9/10 times feels amazing, because the 1/10th success is worth it all. - Why do I say this? Simply put, I have been making huge headway with Ruby, Rails, NVIM & overall code condition. To say I have enjoyed it would be an understatement, but it is bloody hard! I fail all the time, debug all the time and spend relatively little time writing my "pretty code". Ontop of this, eye-openning cost analysis talks about web-dev & client speed and response has made me realise sometimes simple is better, from a business perspective. Ofcourse, alot of this is not new to my but simply presented in a different context. This is alot of waffle for me saying "I'm loving learning my new skills". - What have I achieved? In the recent times, making my Rails Portfolio faster has been of great importance. Running on a multi threaded server, I am looking into threaded work, concurrency and asynchronous computing. All very scary, all very exciting and SOME OF IT WORKING! I have also gotten to great grips with NVIM and continue to accelerate, much goes the same for the usage of Rust, of which I have found the book, edu book & Rustlings to be incredibly useful for learning Rust in a robust way. Thanks no-boilerplate, your Rust hype train aids me well ;) - Enough babble, this blog has no direction or specific purpose other than to say I am loving the current code climate, learning is great fun and you all should develop in Ruby & Rust! Below is a fun image :)
funsies :))))