Coding Blocks

A podcast by Allen Underwood, Michael Outlaw, Joe Zack

Categories:

242 Episodes

  1. Why Date-ing is Hard

    Published: 3/18/2019
  2. 101. What Should You Learn Next?

    Published: 3/4/2019
  3. 100. Tackling Tough Developer Questions

    Published: 2/18/2019
  4. 99. JAMstack with J.A.M.

    Published: 2/4/2019
  5. 98. Data Structures – Heaps and Tries

    Published: 1/21/2019
  6. 97. Data Structures – (some) Trees

    Published: 1/8/2019
  7. 96. Data Structures – Hashtable vs Dictionary

    Published: 12/17/2018
  8. 95. Data Structures – Arrays and Array-ish

    Published: 12/3/2018
  9. 94. Data Structures – Primitives

    Published: 11/19/2018
  10. 93. Developer Shopping Spree

    Published: 11/5/2018
  11. 92. Azure Functions and CosmosDB from MS Ignite

    Published: 10/22/2018
  12. 91. How to Learn Programming Skills

    Published: 10/8/2018
  13. 90. Comparing Git Workflows

    Published: 9/24/2018
  14. 89. Does Big O Matter?

    Published: 9/10/2018
  15. 88. What is Algorithmic Complexity?

    Published: 8/27/2018
  16. 87. Thunder Talks

    Published: 8/13/2018
  17. 86. Lightning Talks

    Published: 7/30/2018
  18. 85. Graph Algorithms

    Published: 7/16/2018
  19. 84. Algorithms You Should Know

    Published: 6/25/2018
  20. 83. Search Driven Apps

    Published: 6/11/2018

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Pragmatic talk about software design best practices: design patterns, software architecture, coding for performance, object oriented programming, database design and implementation, tips, tricks and a whole lot more. You'll be exposed to broad areas of information as well as deep dives into the guts of a programming language. Most topics discussed are relevant in any number of Object Oriented programming languages such as C#, Java, Ruby, PHP, etc.. All three of us are full stack web and database / software engineers so we discuss Javascript, HTML, SQL and a full spectrum of technologies and are open to any suggestions anyone might have for a topic. So please join us, subscribe, and invite your computer programming friends to come along for the ride.