Sometimes, when I look back over the time I have spent working at trivago, I see how it changed my life and how lucky I have been to get the chance to work among this amazing community, to live and to learn with them. I look back and see a younger version of myself looking desperately for something different and, by just sheer luck, getting it.
Posts about Frontend
JavaScript Workshop with Kyle Simpson
It has been a couple of months since Kyle, author of the “You Don’t Know JS” series, visited our trivago headquarters and gave us a wonderful JavaScript workshop. It was such an enjoyable week, being able to meet Kyle in person and walk through his thinking behind the materials. trivago hosts internal workshops and meetups regularly and offers numerous learning opportunities to the employees throughout the year. This time, we decided to do it a little differently.
Building fast and reliable web applications
Testing your functionality is important, but what happens if other factors come into play? In this blog post we show how trivago handles non-functional testing for every commit and how we scaled it.
In an Open Source World, Everyone Wins - Here's Why
trivago believes that a sustainable Open Source ecosystem benefits developers, companies, and users alike.
Melody - the sound of JavaScript for our Hotel Search
A while ago we decided to Open Source our JavaScript framework, Melody, which we have been using since 2016. We designed Melody to be fast, memory efficient and to be flexible enough for the future.
trivago just made filtering faster and more accessible, but why and how?
Filtering is an important way to find what you’re really looking for, so why should we be okay with some users not being able to access them? We’re not, so we did something about it.
Cluecumber Report Maven Plugin for Cucumber test reporting
We were not as happy as we could be with out Cucumber test reporting solution - so we decided to build a new and shiny one from scratch.
Accessibility at trivago
How accessibility came from being neglected to being an important part of what we do at trivago
Sponsoring Webpack
trivago has decided to sponsor Webpack with a monthly contribution of $10,000 ($120,000/year). We hope that this will help to secure the continued innovation of the project.
We're Hiring
Tackling hard problems is like going on an adventure. Solving a technical challenge feels like finding a hidden treasure. Want to go treasure hunting with us?
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