Gulp is a mainstay of front-end development nowadays. Of course, like all front-end development tools, there is a massive proliferation of build systems, from Webpack to SystemJS and Grunt to Gulp.
Websites have a shelf life of about 5 years, give or take. Once a site gets stale, it’s time to update. You may be going from one CMS to another, i.e., WordPress to Drupal, or you may be moving from Drupal 6 to Drupal 8.
As a junior developer ramping up to learning Drupal, I spent a lot of time clicking through the UI. After getting familiar with it, I wanted to take a look behind the scenes at Drupal’s codebase.
PHP can be challenging to learn, especially if you’re learning Drupal at the same time. Three things stood out to me while I learned how to write PHP within Drupal, and I’m hoping by highlighting them, it might help other junior developers.
The goal of any company is to reduce costs and increase profit, especially when it comes to online and IT projects. When an IT undertaking is a transitional effort, it makes sense to consider staff augmentation and outsourcing.
I’m going to put it out there. This blog is not for senior developers or git gurus; I know you know git. This post is for the noobs, the career-changers like me.