![]() So I’m a big contributor on stack overflow. Oh, and yeah, Stack overflow is probably where people have heard of me. It feels like I must be missing something. Um, I thoroughly enjoying musicals and other shows. But I am the husband off a wonderful woman called Holly. Or rater I am married to a lovely woman… I hate that “I have a wife sounds so “ownership-y. I’m a committed Christian on Methodist local preacher. But basically working on tooling and things to take things forward for future versions that C#. So now, given that C# 8 has now come out with a little bit behind. So I’m proud to be the convener of the ECMA Standardization Committee, which a couple of years ago standardized C# 5. I am hobbyist in terms of the C# language design. So that’s that’s work work.įor fun, I write to the Date/Time Library. So I care about the same things that my customers already care about, which is a great position to be in. I love working in developer relations, which is the area that I’m in because it means that my customers are other developers. Net and C#, which are my passions in terms of technology. I’ve been doing that for three or four years now, which means I get to work for Google, which I love doing, and I’ve been a Google for 11 years, but I still get to work with. And I currently work on the Google Cloud client libraries for. I work for Google out of the London office, although I spend most of my time where I am right now, which is in my shed at the end of my garden, which is a lovely home office. But I was wondering, Could you maybe give us a couple of minutes? Jon I know that there’s going to be very few people who have maybe heard of you and don’t know who you are. So I was wondering if you could maybe introduce yourself to the listeners. It gets me to conferences and things, so I will take advantage of that while I can. I’m not nearly as smart as people seem to expect or want me to be. ![]() But within the developer community, obviously there is this a strange perception off me. So far, far more people have heard of Holly. It’s a very weird situation, being this sort of weird micro celebrity that if you’re not within development, you have never heard of me at all. And if you don’t mind me saying, you know you’re a bit of a celebrity and it’s a great pleasure to be talking to you. It’s always a great pleasure talking to anyone in the. So the first thing I’d like to say, Jon, is thank you ever so much for taking some time out of your Monday evening. ![]() If you would like to help to fix this transcription, please see this GitHub repository Jon’s Introduction Jamie The following is a machine transcription, as such there may be subtle errors. So let’s sit back, open up a terminal, type in dotnet new podcast and let the show begin. NET libraries, or perhaps some of the humorous comments about him on a certain Stack Exchange thread. NET Foundation board, his work at Google where he works on the. Some of you may know Jon from his almost legendary appearances on Stack Overflow, his work at NodaTime, his place on the. In this episode I interviewed Jon Skeet about NodaTime, his work as convener for the ECMA standard for C#, a little on API design, and some of the trivia he has gathered about timezones due to his work on NodaTime. I am your host, Jamie “GaProgMan” Taylor, and this is episode 40: NodaTime with Jon Skeet. NET Core podcast - the only podcast which is devoted to:Īnd not forgetting The. To find out more, go to Third Annual C# Advent blog post on. Throughout December, 50 incredibly high quality posts of top tier content are shared via the hashtag csadvent. NET Core Podcast is proud to be part of the Third Annual C# Advent, which is an event happening throughout December 2019. If (().Date = CreatedOn.InUtc().If this episode was interesting or useful to you, please consider supporting the show with one of the above options. Make some design choices that decouple your dependency on DateTime.Nowįor example, say you have a lot of classes that you want to stamp with a DateTime CreatedOn.Give up and wait for the next app to start your testing practice.When you’re just getting into testing and your app has a lot of time-dependent logic - you might feel like you’ve picked the wrong app to start testing with.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |