Decisions 5
Kamaleshwar BN
Senior Software Engineer at Pulley
Visual Studio Code became famous over the past 3+ years I believe. The clean UI, easy to use UX and the plethora of integrations made it a very easy decision for us. Our gripe with Sublime was probably only the UX side. VSCode has not failed us till now, and still is able to support our development env without any significant effort.
Goland being paid, as well as built only for Go seemed like a significant limitation to not consider it.
Kamaleshwar BN
Senior Software Engineer at Pulley
It was easier to find people who've worked on React than Vue. Angular did not have this problem, but seemed way too bloated compared to React. Angular also brings in restrictions working within their MVC framework. React on the other hand only handles the view/rendering part and rest of the control is left to the developers. React has a very active community, support and has lots of ready-to-use plugins/libraries available.
Kamaleshwar BN
Senior Software Engineer at Pulley
Out of most of the VCS solutions out there, we found Gitlab was the most feature complete with a free community edition. Their DevSecops offering is also a very robust solution. Gitlab CI/CD was quite easy to setup and the direct integration with your VCS + CI/CD is also a bonus. Out of the box integration with major cloud providers, alerting through instant messages etc. are all extremely convenient. We push our CI/CD updates to MS Teams.
Kamaleshwar BN
Senior Software Engineer at Pulley
Did not evaluate any other container solution, Docker is probably the go-to container solution now and it was a no brainer for us as well. Docker plays a huge role in streamlining our development & CI/CD side of things. Being able to reliably push and being able to combat the ever famous "but it works on my computer!" is a godsend!