Holy moly that video was SO CLEAN! I really love your explanations. Every detail about it is very nice, you speak slowly, I can understand you very well (I am not from English-native speaking country), you provide little examples which are sufficient for topic you are talking about. Just WOW. Thank you for such videos. If here, on UA-cam, You provide knowledge in such an amazing way, I can't imagine how You do that in your paid courses. Some day when I can afford your paid courses, I will 100% buy them.
@@PhilippLackner I'am from Indonesia and my age is 16. Disekolah ku pembelajaran android sangat lah tidak Untuk diikuti atau jadi tujuan bekerja karena memang dari gurunya dan satu sekolah itu saya tahu mereka lebih mengarahkan ke web juga semua pelajaran dari jurusan rekayasa perangkat lunak disana masuk ke web. Saya juga mengambil dari web android nya dan sering membaca dari jar untuk tambahan info
Phillip can you make video about another technologies about backend lang for creating an API? So, it can be useful for completely being an Android developrt candidate. Thank you 🙌🏻
Android devs are rarely "full stack" where they're implementing the backend APIs using node or whatever. Definitely a good skill to have, but only after you've mastered the android side of things or if you want to move into backend or full-stack development.
Phillipp, do you plan on covering DSA at any point? I think that's the only topic you haven't talked about. And it's one of the most important for getting an actual job. Going over all the basic data structures and algorithms in Kotlin is something that's actually missing on youtube.
Love it! I would still stick to having a domain layer for bigger projects. I really really enjoy domain centric approach that acts like a middleman between ui and data declaring interfaces that will be implemented by other layers. + use cases are helpful - even for beginner to just cut out frequently reused logic from viewmodels etc.. Cleaaannnn
Start a lot of projects and try different approaches to achieve the same results. Read and contribute to open source projects. Refactor other people's code. Read books. Never stop learning.
I really agree "stay open for other people's perspective and don't try to hammer your approach into other people's brains by portraying it as the only real way to do something...". Especially when you are responsible for architecture work in a team, don't just think about yourself.
For me the best architcture, is one the is easy tô understand and easy tô make New implementations, like an API backend, is you U do a good architecture, u will online change the endpoint, u know What a mean. DO NOT TRY REINVENT WHEELS.
Great video as always Phillip! I've been a fan of your content for a while now and your insight has helped me a lot in my career. I would like to request an architecture video but specifcally for Kotlin Multiplatform development if possbile 🙏
Holy moly that video was SO CLEAN! I really love your explanations. Every detail about it is very nice, you speak slowly, I can understand you very well (I am not from English-native speaking country), you provide little examples which are sufficient for topic you are talking about. Just WOW. Thank you for such videos.
If here, on UA-cam, You provide knowledge in such an amazing way, I can't imagine how You do that in your paid courses. Some day when I can afford your paid courses, I will 100% buy them.
@@Klusio19 So happy to help!
@@PhilippLackner bro please Reply to this message, apakah firebases tutorial yang dulu anda buat masih dapat bekerja?
@@PhilippLackner I'am from Indonesia and my age is 16.
Disekolah ku pembelajaran android sangat lah tidak Untuk diikuti atau jadi tujuan bekerja karena memang dari gurunya dan satu sekolah itu saya tahu mereka lebih mengarahkan ke web juga semua pelajaran dari jurusan rekayasa perangkat lunak disana masuk ke web. Saya juga mengambil dari web android nya dan sering membaca dari jar untuk tambahan info
Tidak perlu bang, aku akan mendownload nya saja dan menonton lalu jika masih memungkinkan, Thank you for your time
hands down best youtuber on android
Phillip can you make video about another technologies about backend lang for creating an API? So, it can be useful for completely being an Android developrt candidate. Thank you 🙌🏻
Android devs are rarely "full stack" where they're implementing the backend APIs using node or whatever. Definitely a good skill to have, but only after you've mastered the android side of things or if you want to move into backend or full-stack development.
I'd also love to see more content about custom build logic using Gradle.
I'd love to see more content about aar libraries that have no UI. Thanks!
hey phillip can you talk about google play problems i read a lot of termination problems in reddit and i am teriffied as beginner
Just when we needed it... ON TIME! ON POINT! THANKS A LOT SIR ♥️
when you will do discount for private course in pl-code
in the black Friday you should do early this month
please reply
I'm a beginner. This is good information.
Phillipp, do you plan on covering DSA at any point? I think that's the only topic you haven't talked about. And it's one of the most important for getting an actual job. Going over all the basic data structures and algorithms in Kotlin is something that's actually missing on youtube.
Android devs don't really need DSA
Unless you wanna do back-end stuff
You do if you want to get high paying jobs
Thanks a lot, ppl tend to overcomplicate these topics
I'm not able to buy and enroll you courses!
Watching from INDIA
🤝
Who asked
Thank you for your work
Love it! I would still stick to having a domain layer for bigger projects. I really really enjoy domain centric approach that acts like a middleman between ui and data declaring interfaces that will be implemented by other layers. + use cases are helpful - even for beginner to just cut out frequently reused logic from viewmodels etc.. Cleaaannnn
A beginner usually needs at least half a year of practice to even understand what domain truly means
@PhilippLackner True true, im talking about more advanced but still beginner preparing for a first job/ to be able to get some internship
What is the best and correct way to learn software engineering the right way?
Start a lot of projects and try different approaches to achieve the same results. Read and contribute to open source projects. Refactor other people's code. Read books. Never stop learning.
I really agree "stay open for other people's perspective and don't try to hammer your approach into other people's brains by portraying it as the only real way to do something...". Especially when you are responsible for architecture work in a team, don't just think about yourself.
This was a amazingly clear explanation thanks. See you on Nov 2nd
If you attending, can you record it and share it with me? or at least some slides?
For me the best architcture, is one the is easy tô understand and easy tô make New implementations, like an API backend, is you U do a good architecture, u will online change the endpoint, u know What a mean. DO NOT TRY REINVENT WHEELS.
More videos like this 🎉
13:13 so glad there's still common sense against religion.
This site can’t be reached
ANDROID!!! ( after that I will also learn iOS native )
I disagree testing would be "advanced concept". Without automated tests, it's not programming, it's just sketching.
Great video as always Phillip! I've been a fan of your content for a while now and your insight has helped me a lot in my career. I would like to request an architecture video but specifcally for Kotlin Multiplatform development if possbile 🙏
The architecture for KMP is no different than for Android
The fast paced style of the video is really distracting! From the speed of the speech, to video transitions and cuts.
Dude usually speaks fast. Just get used to it
I always use pause / play. It gives also an opportunity to reflect on what was said