2023-04-13

Testing a periodic worker

I came across somebody that was asking about how to test their code. They had a function that would do certain work at short intervals and then some other work after a longer period of time. They provided a simplified version of the code and it looked something like this. They had coverage for the short period work (I guess functions foo and/or bar in the simplified example had some side effect they could test for.

2023-03-30

Using soft limits to prevent abuse with good user experience

When you develop a service you will probably run into a situation where you want to put in some arbitrary large limit on something to prevent bad behaving clients from using too much of your resources. This can be a max length of the URI, max length of each request header, max size of a request and so on. What we tend to do is often to return some kind of error when this happens and expect the client to fix their request if it is legitimate. But what if it is a legitimate request - just something you didn't expect to be valid? Or what if there is a bug in the client, but the user have no way of fixing the client but rely heavily on your service? Do you really want to completely break your users in these cases?

2023-03-09

OKR mistakes and how to avoid them

Using OKRs is popular at a lot of companies and has become a golden standard for a lot of companies. But just like how companies start their agile transformation because they heard it was good but without understanding what it is really about. I've seen the same thing happen where OKRs are misunderstood.

2022-12-08

Go for C# developers: LINQ

When I worked in C# I loved LINQ. I also probably used it more than I should have. I have recently looked into some options to bring LINQ to a Go project so let me share some observations.

TL;DR: I don't think we'll see much use of LINQ in idiomatic Go. Nor should we desire it.

2022-11-24

Go for C# developers: Unicode strings

 There are a few gotchas with strings in Go if they contain unicode characters.

2022-09-08

Go for C# developers: Using keywords as identifiers

It doesn't happen very often but sometimes there is a variable name that makes sense that happens to be a reserved word in the language. In C# when this happens you prefix it with "@" so you get @new as a variable name. Not quite as clean with the prefix, but clear what is going on. Go takes a different approach.

2022-06-23

What is the purpose of a test name?

Since I'm certainly a person who has been passionate about how tests are named, this article first made me a little upset since it almost suggested Test123 to be a good name. But as I kept reading I started to question my own crusade regarding test names quite a bit.

2022-02-24

How to annoy your users featuring Volvo

I've owned a Volvo since 2017 and I would have hoped would have been fixed by a software update at this time, but no. So here are two things that annoy me pretty much every time I use the car. And then a third recent WTF moment.

2022-02-10

A coding interview that never happened

I've conducted hundreds of interviews that involve some kind of problem solving and most of them involved writing the solution in code. And most candidates make the same mistake so I figured it was time to share a simple strategy that seems to have worked for me over the years when I was the candidate.