Full Stack developer
• Do you want to dive into multiple technologies and put them to work?
• Do you have a continuous improvement mindset?
• Does it give you energy to look for solutions for challenging problems?
Answered YES to these questions? Then you might be the Front-End developer we are looking for in the DQI Full Stack team!
What?
• Developing applications on our internal Cloud Application Platform.
• You’ll be working with technologies like Java & Spring Framework, dockers on OpenShift (= Kubernetes by Red Hat), a fully automated build & deploy pipeline, git, continuous releasing, Kibana for log analysis, Prometheus for automated alert management… And you’ll be working with a cloud-native development mindset.
• We also build the front-end for our applications using the Angular framework.
Your strengths?
• Key (= must have):
o Very good experience with Angular
• A plus for:
o Experience creating / using dockers and OpenShift
o Knowledge of Hibernate
• Nice to have:
o Java & Spring Boot experience
• You are a self-driven, enterprising, dynamic professional.
• You take initiative and responsibility.
• You’re able to settle in quickly.
• You have a flexible mindset and a hunger to learn.
• You have a healthy dose of pragmatism and creativity.
• You continuously interact with your colleagues – and take initiative to do so.
• You can communicate your ideas in a fluent, structured and convincing way.
• Given the international context, English and using collaboration tools like MS Teams are not a problem for you.
How?
• We work with a DevOps mindset. That means you’ll be creating new features while also keeping tabs on the running applications. Occasional bugfixes and interaction with users are part of the job. While you quickly fix any bugs that occur, you keep our (internal) users updated through Yammer.
• Assignments are tackled through the Agile methodology (and supported by Jira). Software is delivered in short iterations (sprints), allowing us to react quickly to new developments.
• We build high quality software. No feature is “done” until there’s test cases for it and it is properly documented.