Normally you would just throw those files into the .gitignore and be fine. You could literally put something like *.env in there and then no environment files would be committed every again
Again, you can charge for your product and still be OS Business is not just about the product but about the story behind it, the company that you have, etc.
Btw could you share a no bs 1 year roadmap with the best courses and practices? I was thinking that maybe it be more focused on backend because let's be honest, the backend logic is the hardest and frontend is also saturated. My current situation is that I understand some amount of code but I can’t write my own. I think this is a problem for many aspiring programmers. hope you can address this
Everyone needs to find their own way. There is no definitive 1 year roadmap. And even if there was one, the job market would immediately saturated with the same type of programmer copycat 😂
You forgot one of the other important points about OSS. Your work is public to potential other employers that might want to hire you..
for sure! that's a huge deal!
I now open source everything, got a few projects with stars and I can show them on my resume
Nice man, it’s a great experience
Bro you have env files on some of your repos with sensitive information. Just make sure that can not be misused
Normally you would just throw those files into the .gitignore and be fine. You could literally put something like *.env in there and then no environment files would be committed every again
like?
@@Unbreathable not if it's already been committed, still stays in the history
@@punkweb u can change ur token (usually)
@@NizzyABIlike in magic auth repo , dashboard tutorial
people will steal ur code -> make competitor to ur own app and get money on ur work
Again, you can charge for your product and still be OS
Business is not just about the product but about the story behind it, the company that you have, etc.
Good night!
Good night :)
guys dont listen to this guy 😮 he is gonna steal your secret api keys
I will 😎
Btw could you share a no bs 1 year roadmap with the best courses and practices? I was thinking that maybe it be more focused on backend because let's be honest, the backend logic is the hardest and frontend is also saturated. My current situation is that I understand some amount of code but I can’t write my own. I think this is a problem for many aspiring programmers. hope you can address this
Everyone needs to find their own way. There is no definitive 1 year roadmap. And even if there was one, the job market would immediately saturated with the same type of programmer copycat 😂