WebCrawler

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WebCrawler

@syntax_voyager

Full-Stack Development| Coffee | Soccer | AI | Memes | Let's connect and grow together!

United States Katılım Ekim 2024
154 Takip Edilen181 Takipçiler
WebCrawler
WebCrawler@syntax_voyager·
Day 236/365 Yesterday on #TheOdinProject, I explored constraint validation and deepened my understanding of client-side vs server-side validation. Now I’m putting it into practice by building a validation form. In the meantime, I’ll continue the curriculum with the #CSS Grid section. I’ve used it many times, but I know there’s more to learn about its use and applications. This is going to be a good day. #WebDevelopment #JavaScript
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WebCrawler
WebCrawler@syntax_voyager·
@eliana_jordan Good life lesson…you can make it if you truly want to 💪💪
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Eliana
Eliana@eliana_jordan·
My mentor at my first dev job once told me: “You will never make it to Junior 2.” Why? Because I asked a question about a technology I had never used before. The next day HR and the CEO scheduled a call. I was fired for that same reason. Now imagine if I had a weak mindset. That moment could’ve convinced me I wasn’t good enough. That I should quit coding. But I didn’t. I laughed and kept going. 4 years later: • I have 3 apps making money • I code better than that mentor • I make more than I did at that job And more importantly, I learned things that job would never have taught me: Infrastructure. Security. Marketing. Finance. So in a way… they were right. I was never meant to make it to Junior 2. I was meant to be CEO and CTO of my own things.
Eliana tweet media
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WebCrawler
WebCrawler@syntax_voyager·
Day 235/365 In #TheOdinProject today I learned about client-side form validation. Browsers can validate user input using built-in HTML attributes like required, pattern, minlength/maxlength, min/max, step, and type. This helps catch invalid data early and improves UX. I also learned that client-side validation can be bypassed, so server-side validation is still essential for security. #WebDevelopment #JavaScript #LearningInPublic
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WebCrawler
WebCrawler@syntax_voyager·
@Abmankendrick I’ll go with A. It’s a better UX in my opinion, straight to the point and easier to understand
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WebCrawler retweetledi
Lis Law
Lis Law@szewailaw_lis·
I’d actually recommend indie hackers try posting build videos on the Chinese platform RedNote. I’ve seen quite a few foreigners get surprisingly good reach there, sometimes posts really blow up. The tech vibe is great, and people there are pretty willing to pay to try new products.
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GREG ISENBERG
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg·
how to build an AI-first SaaS in 2026 1. start with a big market. finance, healthcare, real estate. then zoom into a sub-niche. 2. map the niche’s workflow end-to-end. literally write every step they do daily. ex: leads → scheduling → quoting → follow-ups → payments. 3. highlight where money changes hands. deposits, invoices, negotiations. those moments are where software captures value. 4. identify the repetitive mechanical tasks. anything someone does the same way every day is an automation opportunity. 5. quantify the pain. if a business owner spends 100 hours a year on something and their time is worth $300/hour, that’s a $30k problem. 6. manually perform the workflow yourself. most AI SaaS actually starts as a service. that’s why so many new YC companies begin with humans in the loop. 7. document every step. separate judgment tasks from mechanical tasks. agents handle the mechanical work. 8. turn those steps into agent workflows and connect them to real tools (email, slack, stripe, crm, APIs). 9. build media while you build the product. post daily about the workflow. use AI to research content ideas and scripts. the audience becomes your distribution. 10. launch narrow, show proof (hours saved, revenue generated), then expand into adjacent workflows until you become the default execution layer for that niche. people saying everyday that saas is dying it’s evolving into agents + software + media. full breakdown in the latest episode of @startupideaspod lots of sauce in this one all for free because i can't wait to see what you build watch
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Sotiris Kaniras
Sotiris Kaniras@CastAsHuman·
@cinamarina This is a common issue. What they are telling you is that since you are using apple sign in, you can access the users' full name. You should use it as an auto-complete so that the user doesn't have to type it.
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Marina Cina
Marina Cina@cinamarina·
My app got rejected… again 😅 2/3 of the issues are resolved, only this one remains. But I don’t get it, even when signing in with Apple, some apps still ask for “name.” Should I just switch to “username”? Anyone ever faced this?
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AA
AA@measure_plan·
i made a game where you play the piano IRL to survive against waves of monsters started as a weekend project and a demo video. people online seemed to want it, so i turned it into a full game it's the first time i publish a paid game, and so far it's sold 240 copies in the first month most players are coming from IG. there's a lot of piano teachers and people learning music who like the concept v1 only had 1 game mode, but now there's 5 ways to play: notes, chords, scales, perfect pitch, full song battle more to come on Midi Survivor. more minigames and maybe a steam release too :]
AA@measure_plan

play increasingly complicated jazz chords as fast as you can or else

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WebCrawler
WebCrawler@syntax_voyager·
@trikcode That’s great advice, some people eventually can learn through vibe coding but I believe it’s more like a pattern remembrance, and not actually knowing why the code behaves the way it does
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Wise
Wise@trikcode·
Vibe coding is for experienced software devs. Do not vibe code until you really know how to do the basic stuff.
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nox
nox@vroxolxkmoeofrz·
@jjjorfi @trikcode Vibe coding is actually a good way to learn to code as long as you look at the code, actually write some of the code from time to time, and most importantly... keep asking it how and why and what if?
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