This is the most interesting comment so far! I do agree that there is gonna be some sort of magic in the code, no matter what you work on. But in my opinion and as per my experience building enterprise applications, not quantifying the magic in your code usually blows up. I remember back when we simply imported 'lodash.js' as whole, we considered it as a utility library, but relatively it was HUGE🤯. In a nutshell, all I meant was a: At least a shallow understanding about the magic that your'e supposed to use always helps!
Some comments have been hidden by the post's author - find out more
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
This is the most interesting comment so far! I do agree that there is gonna be some sort of magic in the code, no matter what you work on. But in my opinion and as per my experience building enterprise applications, not quantifying the magic in your code usually blows up. I remember back when we simply imported 'lodash.js' as whole, we considered it as a utility library, but relatively it was HUGE🤯. In a nutshell, all I meant was a: At least a shallow understanding about the magic that your'e supposed to use always helps!