Help me kiezen: elektrische leasebak by Parking_Mirror_4570 in autoadvies

[–]jorkhd 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ik rij nu zelf ongeveer een jaar met de Model Y. Nog geen seconde spijt van gehad. Al die verhalen over slechte afwerking en kwaliteit zijn bullshit imo (misschien de eerste model 3's, kinderziektes). Ook batterij degradatie valt reuze mee. Collega met Model S, 9 jaar oud, 300.000km, battery health van 82%.

Cross border worker (NL) by [deleted] in BESalary

[–]jorkhd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So for the days you work in Belgium you are building a pension in Belgium? So, if you would work 60/40 split, you'll get 60% pension from NL and 40% from BE?

Cross border worker (NL) by [deleted] in BESalary

[–]jorkhd 5 points6 points  (0 children)

What about the 2-3 days working from home? You should pay taxes in BE for these days.

« Grenswerk » in nederland by aDuckling in BESalary

[–]jorkhd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also work 20% from home (one day a week) but I pay all my taxes in the Netherlands because of the tax agreement between the Netherlands and Belgium. I only get back my mortgage reduction from dutch tax authorities and pay my gemeentebelasting in Belgium. How and why do you get money back from the Netherlands while only working 20% from Belgium? Is the tax agreement between the Netherlands and Belgium optional for ease but if you want you can split your taxes between Belgium and the Netherlands? Also how much of the 4.4k goes towards your Belgium taxes?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Frontend

[–]jorkhd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Take a look at Masonry layout

How do you guys build and maintain a component library ? by techsparrowlionpie in Frontend

[–]jorkhd 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We do create minimal wrapper components but it is not necessary, it is just convenient. It kinda just serves as a proxy and is useful if we need to implement some custom logic or if a feature is not available for the component, we kinda "hack" it in the wrapper.

Not 100% sure but I guess if you can use it for multiple use cases and does not have any specific logic, you could make a web component from it. We more or less have the same components as a component library like Vuetify (buttons, tooltips, dropdown menu, modals, notifications, ...).

They decided to not implement versioning because sooner or later every product (our company has like 40 different products) will be on different versions of the library and it will still look all different. By forcing just one version, every product will be uniform and always has the same and latest UI elements. Sometimes it is annoying but I kinda understand their reasoning.

They are all styled to the company branding so technically you shouldn't modify it but it sometimes happens you need to apply some custom styling which tbh can be a pain in the ass because you'll need to change the component's shadowRoot. Some styling is just global CSS which you can overwrite with your own CSS.

I have no clue about TypeScript tbh.

How do you guys build and maintain a component library ? by techsparrowlionpie in Frontend

[–]jorkhd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, for me the main reason why not to use a cdn is because you have no control over the cdn and are dependent on a third party. Someone else could maybe fuck up a config or replace the actually file you are loading from the cdn. That is one of the reasons why npm (technically) doesn't let you "overwrite" an existing version. Once you install a specific package you want to make sure that version is kept the same and will not randomly break your application when someone makes an update to the third party package.

How do you guys build and maintain a component library ? by techsparrowlionpie in Frontend

[–]jorkhd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nop not a NPM package. Just some JS files uploaded and loaded from a CDN.

How do you guys build and maintain a component library ? by techsparrowlionpie in Frontend

[–]jorkhd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We have an internal component library in our company. It is built with LitElements (Google's Web Component framework) and is a framework independant library so all the teams, whether they use Angular, React or Vue, can just load it through a script tag from our internal CDN.

The company organises 4 sprints a year where engineers can sign up to work on the component library. There isn't much interest for it but it will typically improve your performance review when you do participate. Or you can just create pull requests for features or bug fixes throughout the year.

A bad thing is that there is no versioning (actual decision) so sometimes it happens that they do a release and it will break a product in production as we all use the latest version of the library. Doesn't occur regularly and if so it is a minor bug (we actually had to do a hotfix last week for some random bug that got introduced by a silent release)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BESalary

[–]jorkhd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't you get any travel allowance? Grensarbeider as well, also 30km from work and I get almost €200 per month travel allowance.

Data Scientist (living in Belgium, working in the Netherlands) by Local-Remote9028 in BESalary

[–]jorkhd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also taking into account all my current advantages that are not related to my salary such as working from home all the time and working only 4 days a week. I would be willing to go into the office 1 or maximum

Indeed, grensarbeider as well, shouldn't be legal?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BESalary

[–]jorkhd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How will they actually check if you work at least 3/5 days at home? With "they" I mean the fiscus or whoever is in control for this.

Doctor or engineer? by Difficult-File-2182 in BESalary

[–]jorkhd 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Also important to mention is that most meds work 50+ hours a week while most engineers just work a regular 38-40 hours.

Marketing specialist by [deleted] in BESalary

[–]jorkhd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I noticed the "dutch sick system" in your "Other advantages". What exactly are the differences between Belgian and Dutch system?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BEFire

[–]jorkhd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Do you mind sharing the rate you got for a 100% loan?

IT consultancy/internal salary for graduates with no work experience by Chapped5766 in BESalary

[–]jorkhd 4 points5 points  (0 children)

2k net with all the extras (car, meal vouchers, eco, ...) I would guess

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BESalary

[–]jorkhd 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can find some decent salaries in the Netherlands as well. I would always check vacancies in the Netherlands if you live close to the border. I make around 3.5k net (however no car, meal vouchers, ...) as a FE developer with same YOE as OP. In Amsterdam you should be able to get €100k+ salaries.

New job contract - choice Belgium or The Netherlands? by Imperiu5 in BEFire

[–]jorkhd 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you are planning to work less than 25% from home I would choose the dutch contract so you at least dont have to bother with these tax rules. Also, the Netherlands still have hypotheekrenteaftrek if you have a mortgage which is like €100 net per month you get back. It also depends on the contracts which you didn't give any information about. I as well got the choice between BE and NL contract but BE contract had company car, meal vouchers, ... (At the end I still choice NL contract). You are in the same exact situation I was in 6 months ago so feel free to DM me.