Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile
Sue ✨

@suereact

Frontend developer | Powered by caffeine, a curious dog, and weekly cycling 🚴‍♀️ | she in @ctrlsheclub

ID: 1682380144554520576

linkhttps://github.com/suereact calendar_today21-07-2023 13:21:16

11,11K Tweet

5,5K Followers

114 Following

Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#learnangularwithme #10 I explored Angular 's services and HTTP calls—and here’s what I realized: Services (with @ Injectable) are Angular’s neat way to separate logic from components. Think of custom hooks or contexts in React, but more structured. Angular HTTP Client makes

Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#learnangularwithme #11 Diving into Angular 's Dependency Injection (DI) system taught me a lot! In React, managing dependencies usually means passing props, using contexts, or custom hooks. Angular does this differently: 🅰️DI automatically provides components/services with

Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#learnangularwithme #12 Here are Angular’s Change Detection strategies: 🅰️Default Change Detection: Automatically updates UI on every event—similar to React’s state-driven re-rendering. 🅰️OnPush: Optimizes performance by updating components only when inputs change, like

Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#learnangularwithme #13 Exploring Angular Lifecycle Hooks gave me fresh insights. In React, the lifecycle often revolves around the magic of useEffect. Angular, on the other hand, gives you a whole set of clearly defined lifecycle hooks: • OnInit / OnDestroy: Great for setting

Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#learnangularwithme #14 Continuing my Angular journey, I dove deeper into some interesting concepts: Feature Modules: Angular lets you split your app into reusable and independently-loadable parts—super handy for scaling. (ja ja I know what u'll say about modules) Custom Pipes:

Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#learnangularwithme #15 This time I dove into Angular’s i18n (internationalization) features! Coming from React, I was curious how Angular handles translations—and found some cool stuff: Unique Identifiers: Angular assigns unique IDs to every translation, making it easy to manage

Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#learnangularwithme #16 Explored Angular Standalone Components today. No more module declarations needed! Cleaner codebase: Less boilerplate and fewer files make Angular projects easier to navigate and maintain. Easier scaling: Components become truly reusable building blocks,

Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#learnangularwithme #17 Explored Angular Signals—and honestly, they’re a breath of fresh air! 🅰️Reactive by default: They update views automatically without extra boilerplate or manual triggers. 🅰️Clear dependencies: Easy-to-follow reactive data flows—like built-in, lightweight

Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#learnangularwithme #18 Today I explored RxJS while diving deeper into Angular. RxJS solves the complexity of managing asynchronous streams, making things like data fetching or user input feel seamless. Observables are like promises—they handle ongoing streams of data, errors,

Sue ✨ (@suereact) 's Twitter Profile Photo

After two months of silence, I’m finally back. I’ve been deep in code for a while — but now I’ve swapped my dev hat for a marketing one. Less building with my hands, more growing with strategy. Excited to scale what we’ve built!

After two months of silence, I’m finally back.
I’ve been deep in code for a while — but now I’ve swapped my dev hat for a marketing one. Less building with my hands, more growing with strategy. Excited to scale what we’ve built!