Topic:
Notification
It’s 2pm and I am in a meeting with a UI/UX designer to help us design a few new interactions on the platform. I go to the project settings page to invite the designer.
While .NET is one of the most loved frameworks according to Stack Overflow Developer Survey for 2021, that popularity can bring issues for .NET error logging. There are “hundreds of thousands” of .NET packages available on NuGet, so developers can end up with an overwhelming tech stack to simply analyze .NET performance and monitor errors. How can you efficiently debug your code even as it scales up with all the third-party libraries you might use and their associated configurations? One simple but commonly overlooked answer: logging.
Logging is the practice of recording the alerts and messages that you get about the state of your code. As your application may run into inefficiencies, errors, or even crash, you can save the associated messages together with all the relevant context. In this guide, we will go through JavaScript error logging across the multiple categories.
Since .NET is so versatile, this suite of products can be used for both front-end and back-end software development. People who work on both sides are referred to as full stack developers since they work with the entire tech stack for their applications. Given that full stack development encompasses a large variety of tools and techniques, full stack developers are not usually specialists in one area or another.