Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Community”
Is not writing tests unprofessional?
Triggered by Marco Pivetta who apparently said during his talk at Symfony Live Berlin: “If you still don’t have tests, this is unprofessional”, I thought I’d tweet about that too: “It’s good for someone to point this out from time to time”.
I don’t like it when a blog post is about tweets, just as I don’t like it when a news organization quotes tweets; as if they are some important source of wisdom. But since this kind of tweet tends to invoke many reactions (and often emotionally charged ones too), I thought it would be smart to get the discussion off Twitter and write something more nuanced instead.
Call to conference organisers: pay your workshop instructors
A little background: speakers don’t get paid
Speakers like myself don’t get paid for doing a talk at a tech conference. That’s why I call this work “open source”. People will get a video or audio recording of the talk, including separately viewable or downloadable slides for free. The idea is, a conference costs a lot of money to organise. It is quite expensive to fly in all those speakers. So there’s no money to pay the speakers for all their work (for me personally it’s about 80 hours of preparation, plus time spent travelling, usually half a day before and after the conference). Speakers get their travel costs reimbursed, they often get two nights at a hotel, and a ticket to the conference. Plus, they get advertising for their personal brand (increasing their reputation as an expert, a funny person, or just a person with more Google results for their name).
Making money with open source, etc.
So, here’s a bit of a personal blog post for once.
Symfony trademark policy
I saw this tweet:
Suite à une mise en demeure, j’ai retiré les tutoriels qui concernent Symfony du Site. Il n’y aura pas de futures vidéos sur le Framework.
— Grafikart (@grafikart_fr) March 11, 2017
Meaning: “Following a formal notice, I removed the tutorials that are related to Symfony from the Site. There will be no future videos on the Framework.”
Compartmentalization in the PHP community
The PHP community
I’m a proud member of the PHP community. Recently I’ve come to realize though that “the PHP community” is a very complicated thing, and in fact, not even one thing.
I consider it part of my “job” to keep track of what’s going on in the community and I consider Twitter to be the proper place to look for news from the community, as well as a great place to check in on the pulse of the community. What are people happy about, what are people looking at, who are they trolling? This is all fascinating to me.
Symfony in Barcelona

I just ate a nice pizza at my hotel room in Barcelona. The funny thing is (at least, to a Dutch guy that is): they wouldn’t be able to give me a pizza before 20:00h. At that time in my home country we have long forgotten our desserts, cleaned the dishes and are starting to think about sleeping (just kidding). Anyway, I got the pizza, it was good and now I’m here to write a little report on the things that happened during the last three days.
Unnecessary contrapositions in the new "Symfony Best Practices"
Of course I’m going to write something about the new Symfony Best Practices book that was written by Fabien Potencier, Ryan Weaver and Javier Eguiluz. It got a lot of negative responses, at least in my Twitter feed, and I think it’s a good idea to read Richard Miller’s post for some suggestions on how to deal with an “early preview release” like this and how we can be a bit more positive about it.