|
|
Web Development Tools Every project requires the development of new code, of course, but sometimes I find that the requirements of a new project would benefit from the use of code developed on a previous project. That's the whole point -- again, of course -- to writing reuseable code. So, as I begin new projects, I usually take along a copy of the code from my previous projects, JIC. And between projects, I try to assemble and organize that code, to expand upon it and document it more fully than project timelines seem to allow, in the hope that it will prove still more useful on the next project. That's all this is, really, the code you'd find in the "Tuff Box" (if I had a Tuff Box) in the back of my pick up truck (if I drove a pick up truck) when I pulled up on your job site (if you had a job site) -- minus the source code, of course.
Programming Services | Development Tools | Book Reviews Experience & Skills |