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Feature Management with LaunchDarkly

You're reading from   Feature Management with LaunchDarkly Discover safe ways to make live changes in your systems and master testing in production

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800562974
Length 314 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Michael Gillett Michael Gillett
Author Profile Icon Michael Gillett
Michael Gillett
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: The Basics
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Feature Management with LaunchDarkly FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Overview of Feature Management 4. Chapter 3: Basics of LaunchDarkly and Feature Management 5. Section 2:Getting the Most out of Feature Management
6. Chapter 4: Percentage and Ring Rollouts 7. Chapter 5: Experimentation 8. Chapter 6: Switches 9. Chapter 7: Trunk-Based Development 10. Chapter 8: Migrations and Testing Your Infrastructure 11. Section 3: Mastering LaunchDarkly
12. Chapter 9: Feature Flag Management in Depth 13. Chapter 10: Users and Segments 14. Chapter 11: Experiments 15. Chapter 12: Debugger and Audit Log 16. Chapter 13: Configuration, Settings, and Miscellaneous 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding segments

While users, within the context of LaunchDarkly, require implementation in the code base, the concept of segments exists within the tool itself. A segment can be considered a group of users that all fall within a certain category. This grouping is defined within LaunchDarkly and relies on the targeting rules we have already seen in several chapters, especially Chapter 4, Percentage and Ring Rollouts. We will see them in the next couple of sections as well.

Segments can be used to great effect when there are frequently used targeting rules or features that are regularly rolled out to certain groups of customers. Because the segments are created with the same attributes that are used within the targeting rules, some custom attributes might be used across several or all applications within your system to ensure segments can be used effectively. For example, there might a classification for a customer, such as new customer, regular customer, and VIP. By providing...

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