Meet Aleksandar Andrijevic – we’ll have the pleasure to hear from him for the first time at this year’s WordCamp Sofia. Aleksandar is a back-end software developer with over 5 years of experience with web and other technologies. He’s currently working at Folkmatic in Belgrade.
Aleksandar is developing hard-to-find functionalities for the WordPress platform on a daily basis and he has a lot of amazing insights and tips to share with us.
Before we hear from him on the 11th of November, let’s see how it all begun:
Hey Aleksandar, can you introduce yourself ?
My name is Aleksandar Andrijevic, I am currently living and working in Belgrade, Serbia, but I am originally from the city of Nis, southern part of Serbia.What’s your specialty?
I am primarily а back-end developer, working with PHP/JavaScript and some frameworks. I also develop in WordPress, themes and plugins. Most of the time I am also good at making pasta, it depends on ingredients available and how much I am not lazy! 🙂How many languages do you speak?
I speak Serbian, English and a little bit of German.What was your first encounter with WordPress?
I was working at my previous company, and one day they just said „Listen, we have one project, it’s nothing hard“. I liked it, and from then on, I am happy with it. 🙂What is the best WordPress advice you have ever received?
„Keep it updated“.What is your motivation to speak at WordCamp Sofia 2017?
To share my experience and to support the WordPress community grow. I am always willing to help people when in need and I am glad if someone took interest purely on that. And of course, to meet with some old and new friends 🙂How did you you choose the topic of your talk?
I was always interested in mobile applications, and I was looking for a way to cover both iOS and Android when building something, so one day I discovered cross-platform framework that do that. Code-once/run anywhere is my choice whenever possible.
What is you favorite movie?
There are many, but let’s say for now „Heat(1995)„
Aleksandar will talk about going native with the WordPress API, which might be interesting for anybody who needs to build a cross-platform iOS/Android mobile app to access the WordPress API. He tried it in NativeScript and will touch on his experience with it.
Want to make sure you don’t miss all these insights? Get your ticket for WordCamp Sofia 2017 today!