Decaying Code

Where code comes to die

About the author

Maxime Rouiller is a passionate .NET technology specialist, working for 7 years in large software development, advocating Agile and TDD. Aware of the latest technological trends, he intervenes as a specialist in the .NET Montréal usergroup and acts regularly as a speaker for Web Form programmers on the MVC platform.

View Maxime Rouiller's profile on LinkedIn

Month List

MVC Night in Ottawa with MVP Maxime Rouiller

I will be talking about MVC and it’s environnement today at the OttawaCommunity.net in… Ottawa.

For those who attended, or about to attend, here are the slides that are going to be used:

The Slides


Categories: community | presentation | event
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DevCamp Montreal 2011– jQuery Presentation

For those who will attend tonight’s presentation fast talk on jQuery, here is my presentation file that I will be using tonight.

It’s available for download by clicking the link bellow!

Download the presentation file here


Categories: jquery | presentation
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Participating in the community and improving yourself

This post is sadly not going to be about code so much that it's going to be about the profession. Some professions have it easy. You can cut hairs without having to learn something new every 2-3 months. You can build houses without having to learn new methods every year. Of course, all professions are evolving and new ways to do the same task more effectively are created.

What is really different when you are coding is that new languages are coming every 1-2 years. Methodologies are coming every 5 years. New frameworks are coming every 5-6 months. I might be off on those numbers but I feel pretty confident about it. WPF came in less than 2 years. C# 3.0 came in a year and a half ago. C# 4.0 is due to 2010.

All those technology require a lot of our time to learn. This is the main reason why there is so much conference, workshop and community event happening in a single city. This year, I'm going to the .NET Montreal User group , I'm trying to organize a Coding Dojo, I'm attending the Montreal Codecamp 2009 and I'm presenting at this same Codecamp. My question here is... is it too much?

I feel that I won't learn enough in my lifetime to but a great programmer but that if I work enough, I might just be good enough to be proud of my work and make changes in the way that we do our job (The Daily WTF anyone?).

However, even if the amount of changes are tremendous... I don't see any desire to participate in community events. It doesn't mean a lack of desire to improve. I just think that a lot of people like to learn on their own off a book or by doing the trip themselves.

How is it on your side? How is it like in the US? India? Slovakia (yeah! got a lot of those readers!) ?

What is your take on participating inside the community and self improvement?


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CodeCamp Montreal 2009 - Unit testing with Moq

I'm happy to announce you that I've been selected to present a session at the Montreal CodeCamp.

My session is going to be focussed on Moq and unit testing. Since simply looking at a framework can be done simply, I'll be going over the framework and many "how-to". I'll also try to fit a few interesting demo with some "refactoring for unit test". Of course, this will all be centered around "best practices" since it's the theme of this year.

See you all there!


Categories: mock | moq | presentation | unit test
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"Utilisations des mocks avec Moq" - Using mocks with Moq

For those who attended my presentation at the Montreal .NET User Group, here is a list of links that I mentioned inside my presentation:


Categories: mock | moq | presentation
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