@katrinbretscher Ideally, don't call it
craftsmanship, but software craft. I think
@emilybache has made a great effort to
formalize teaching the mindset in https://www.sammancoaching.org/. And here
are two videos I like that help to understand the mindset a crafter aims to be
in:
6 replies
@katrinbretscher
@emilybache I'd also recommend joining
conferences like the upcoming virtual https://frogsconf.nl/, and other
software craft confereces (https://softwarecrafters.org/) where you will find
many people to answer your question.
@katrinbretscher
@emilybache Finally, I'd like to say that
"software craft" is not a goal, but a journey, and for me the point is to have
an honest conversation about what we do and how we do it as humans in front of
computers and how that impacts ourselves, our coworkers, clients and society.
@katrinbretscher
@emilybache Those conversations have to be
both technical AND personal, otherwise we can't exercise our full potential and
make most of our privilege and responsibility working in this industry.
@katrinbretscher
@emilybache TDD for those who don't need it
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a6oP24CSdUg
@katrinbretscher
@emilybache TDD, Where Did It All Go Wrong
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EZ05e7EMOLM
@katrinbretscher
@emilybache And a quick reminder about what
software craft is:
https://coderbyheart.com/become-a-certified-software-craftsperson