Serverless Handbook for frontend engineers is the resource I wish I had jumping into serverless.
A guide borne of experience and pain.
No academic bullshit where you're not sure if the author ever used this stuff in production.
I have.
From baby side-projects to high traffic data processing monsters.
As Google likes to say: serverless architectures, ]from prototype to production to planet-scale Here's what early readers had to say.
- Serverless Handbook taught me high-leveled topics.
I don't like specific courses with source code (unless it's the exactly thing I want to build) but these chapters helped me to feel like i'm not a total noob anymore.
The hand-drawn diagrams and high-leveled descriptions gave me the feeling that i don't have any critical knowledge gaps anymore - I'm using these skills on some serverless projects in a dayjob.
Also very convenient to use with my side projects.
- The code examples! I like that you included a lot of code examples.
It sparked my interest in serverless.
Since reading the book I've taken a few courses/workshops in serverless but this was the book that started the serverless journey for me.
Can't wait to build a micro SaaS app with my friends Serverless Handbook takes you from backend beginner to solid full-stack engineer .
It shows you the mindsets and tactics to use with any backend.
It talks about distributed data processing , designing a REST API, how to build GraphQL, handling authentication, and keeping your code secure.
Every chapter helps you choose what to do.
Because your project is unique and understanding beats cookie-cutter recipes.
This book is a why, not a how.
But there's enough how to start you off: ) Serverless Handbook is everything I wish I knew about backend programming 10 years ago.
Say | Serverless architectures from prototype to production to planetscale |
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But there's enough how to start you off | ) |