Hunter Miller - Web Developer

Hunter Miller




Web and software development student at Western Technical College.

About Me

Hello! My name is Hunter Miller, and I am from a small town near La Crosse, Wisconsin. Growing up, I've always enjoyed playing sports and have been racing cars at the local track since I was 15 years old. I am currently a student at Western Technical College in La Crosse, Wisconsin pursuing a degree to become a web and software developer in the future. Take a look at some of the programming technologies that I have come across and have experienced, check out my blog, and feel free to contact me if you have any more questions!

Programming Technologies

Of course, as a web developer my first interaction with creating web pages involved using html5 markup. I have used this extensively throughout my projects creating websites and expanded on its use with the Angular framework to create dynamic web pages.

The use of CSS3 has been used throughout all of my projects to incorporate a style that is responsive and clean. This includes utilizing frameworks such as bootstrap to create web pages that look sleek and perform on a variety of devices.

The first use of “real” programming in my studies have been involved with manipulating DOM objects in a webpage with JavaScript. Take a look at some of my earlier projects such as the online rock-paper-scissors game or the in-browser etch-a-sketch that I created to get a glimpse at how I utilized JavaScript earlier in my studies.

Java was the first language that we studied in our curriculum that was a real object-orientated programming language. This allowed me to understand basic OOP principles to further my understanding of programming.

C# is a language that I personally love with its capability to use the .NET Core framework. A few of my personal projects utilized the .NET Core framework as the back-end to websites with the MVC model.

Many of my projects have utilized Angular on the front-end to create dynamic web pages. Angular has been a personal favorite of mine on the front-end with its relative ease to deliver input validation.

Android development was a part of the core curriculum at Western Technical College, giving us a glimpse on how to create applications on the mobile side of development.

All of my development projects, whether for school or personal, have utilized Git to back-up and log changes made throughout development.