Dillon Mulroy is a Principal Engineer with nine years of experience building front-end and full-stack web applications, currently driving engineering at Cloudflare after a recent stint at Vercel. He specializes in TypeScript, Node, React and has applied functional programming with OCaml to production problems, blending pragmatic engineering with language-driven correctness. Dillon has a strong open-source footprint, contributing UI and accessibility improvements to popular projects like Victory and Google’s Web Stories for WordPress. His career spans startups and platform companies where he’s led feature design, refactors, and integrations that improve developer DX and user-facing UX. Based in Raleigh, NC, he pairs a systems-minded approach with attention to polish—often surfacing keyboard navigation and tooltip improvements that quietly raise product quality. He holds a Bachelor’s in Computer and Information Sciences and regularly bridges product needs with maintainable, well-tested implementations.
9 years of coding experience
12 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor’s Degree, Computer and Information Sciences, Bachelor’s Degree, Computer and Information Sciences at Commonwealth University-Mansfield
Contributions:62 reviews, 127 commits, 90 PRs in 4 months
Contributions summary:Dillon primarily contributes to the front-end development of the Web Stories WordPress plugin. Their commits focus on implementing new features and modifying existing ones within the user interface using React. This includes the integration of feature flags for conditional rendering, and refactoring components to improve user experience. Furthermore, the user has demonstrated skills in integrating tooltips and keyboard navigation for better user experience.
A collection of composable React components for building interactive data visualizations
Role in this project:
Front-end Developer
Contributions:13 commits, 1 PR, 8 pushes in 9 days
Contributions summary:Dillon contributed to the development of interactive data visualization components within the Victory library. Their commits focused on creating and modifying React-based demo applications, specifically for the `VictoryBar` and other chart types. The changes included adding new demo components, modifying existing ones, and refactoring code related to chart rendering and display. The user also made updates to core utility functions and documentation, demonstrating a focus on improving the library's usability and functionality.
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