HACKER Q&A
📣 gymshoes

Which technical guides or cheatsheets are a must read for a developer?


I was reading WCAG's accessibility success criteria pages and the OWASP cheat sheets and they both ar e something that one needs to read through atleast once.

What are some other documents that are a must-read?


  👤 austincheney Accepted Answer ✓
WCAG and OWASP indicate web development, probably front-end development.

You will want to learn the standard DOM methods. Walking the DOM as a tree structure as opposed to treating it as a database to query will increase your application capabilities. Learning to access the DOM without parsing a selector string will make your application many thousands of this new faster.

I suggest:

* https://gist.github.com/thegitfather/9c9f1a927cd57df14a59c26...

* https://prettydiff.com/2/guide/unrelated_dom.xhtml

* Web APIs - https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API

* RegExp - https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guid...

* http - https://devhints.io/http-status


👤 rtkaratekid
For picking up language syntax quickly or reminding yourself when you're learning a new one: https://learnxinyminutes.com/

And then for more robust language/syntax support: https://rosettacode.org/wiki/Rosetta_Code

And for those who enjoy Vim but, like me, aren't masters quite yet. https://vim.rtorr.com/


👤 seanwilson
I would say Google's Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Starter Guide is essential for frontend developers: https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/7451184?hl=en

I maintain my own guide of concise webdev tips that's mostly distill from and links to recommendations from OWASP, Mozilla and Google which you might find a good jumping-off point: https://www.checkbot.io/guide/


👤 jobigoud
What Every Programmer Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic

https://floating-point-gui.de/


👤 animesh
Why good commit messages matter.

https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/#intro