Shopware 6 PWA Development training
10 January - 11 January
Online, teacher-guided, via Zoom
Online, teacher-guided, via Zoom
Shopware PWA offers a headless frontend for Shopware 6, based on the Vue Storefront Next framework. Thanks to Vue, customizing components both in look & feel and in functionality becomes a breeze. This training gives you a deep dive on how to practically get started with your Shopware 6 PWA frontend.
Training | Shopware 6 PWA Development |
Organizer | Yireo |
Teacher | Jisse Reitsma |
Date & Time | Monday, 10 January 2022, 09:30 - 13:30 (4 hours) Tuesday, 11 January 2022, 09:30 - 13:30 (4 hours) This training includes 2 sessions with time in between for self-study. Mentioned times are in the timezone CEST (Europe/Amsterdam) |
Location | Remote online training via Yireo Training Portal |
Language | English (or Dutch depending on the attendees) |
Price | € 369 per attendee per training |
Minimum attendees | 4 |
Maximum attendees | 12 |
Once the training is finished, each attendee is able to receive a Yireo certification on request. This certificate will be sent to the student afterwards by mail.
Everyone learns at her/his own pace. We provide both in-house training and public training throughout Europe - whatever suits your team best. When 3 or more developers are attending, a custom training is often more economical. Contact us for more details.
Every workshop is accompanied with official Yireo coursematerial. Attendees are sent a digital version of this material after the training. It contains slides, comments and references. Additionally, our GitHub repos contain numerous more code samples.
Online trainings are also our training: Via Zoom or Google Hangout sessions, our teacher is able to connect with your team. The benefit here is that the team is able to connect from various places itself as well, timeframes are more flexible. Afterwards, a video recording will be shared with all attendees for reference.
Shopware has worked together with the Vue Storefront team to use the fundaments of Vue Storefront Next and create a new PWA, optimized for Shopware 6. Shopware PWA offers a clean Vue-approach, with elements of NuxtJS, to allow JavaScript engineers to create a headless frontend for Shopware 6.
Technical merchants
Frontend developers
Experience with Shopware 6 Admin Panel
Experience with Vue fundamentals (binding syntax, slots, routing, Vuex, perhaps even NuxtJS)
Skilled in JavaScript
We are happy to answer any question that you might have
This training is given online via a Zoom hangout. Additionally, you will find digital courseware (slides plus notes, links and code samples) via your Yireo Account. This is much more than just a simple video training. You will attend a live training with all of the benefits of remote.
Besides Zoom, a remote Yireo training also makes use of HTML/JavaScript-based slides (actually written in a custom React component), Google Docs for additional notes, cameras pointing to the teacher plus another camera for a whiteboard and online git repositories for code samples.
The training is only held when there is a number of attendees. This number is usually 4 but sometimes we bring this down to 2 or 3. This minimum number simply means that if a class is not "full", either you get a refund or your ticket is transferred to another date.
When Jisse started with Magento, he already had years of experience programming in Joomla (back in the days when Joomla was actually the #1 CMS - believe it or not). Back then, open source cart solutions were lacking and Magento 1.0 brought a lot of hope.
Quickly Jisse dived into the new architecture: In 2009, he built his first extensions, among which the fundaments of a bridge between Joomla and Magento (MageBridge) and various project-specific extensions (among which payment providers and custom MVC/EAV modules).
Over the years, he experienced what most Magento developers experienced with M1: A lot of power, but also frustration. After a couple of years, it no longer was cutting-edge and it barely adopted new developer standards. When the new Magento 2.0 alpha 1 came out, Jisse started playing with it. And he was relieved to see modern tools in its architecture: Composer, PHP namespacing, testability, CLI-driven management, proper design patterns.
Again, after building some modules and dummy projects, the first Magento 2 developer training was given in January 2017 (two months after the official release) and numerous M2 trainings have followed for both backend developers, frontend developers and devops.
Currently, with Magento 2 being several years old now, the fuzz is no longer about its backend architecture: It is the frontend that matters. Jisse has given numerous frontend development trainings, where people complain about LESS (and not SASS) being used, loading times to be slow (while in fact M2 allows for enough tuning to make it bloody fast), an archaic combo of Knockout/RequireJS (while they both serve their purpose in regards to backwards compatibility).
PWA is the new keyword. Jisse has dived into React, Redux & service workers in combination with GraphQL and NodeJS tools. He is currently working in various initiatives to help developers embrace the new frontend stack (ExtDN, Vue Storefront, DEITY). Also, he has added Docker and Kubernetes to his vocabulary.
As of yet, it is fair to say that Magento holds little surprises for Jisse. He is your guy to train you or your developers properly in both backend and frontend technology.