Developer advocate, full-stack engineer, startup co-founder & CTO, bringing 15 years of experience in Silicon Valley, including at Google and Yahoo!. Public speaker.
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UC Santa Cruz Extension
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Developer Advocate at Weaviate, the open-source semantic search engine
Sure, that's technically true, but for the vast majority of practical intents and purposes, Meteor solves that sync problem and you don't have to write any code. There's certainly value in not reinventing a wheel that's very hard to get round, and a wide perspective of the problem would include full-stack frameworks even if they only offer a 99% solution to this.
Meteor offers more than just caching, including optimistic updates and real-time sync between all connected clients.
I personally haven't used Meteor but if it handles caching well, then I think I'd be in favor of using it.
I realize the title of this article kind of entices a technology flame war but that's not what my point is. It's that managing backend state yourself on the frontend, in the majority of cases, is probably not the best approach. Any technology that handles frontend caching/fetching/invalidation/mutations well is a good way forward.
Developer advocate, full-stack engineer, startup co-founder & CTO, bringing 15 years of experience in Silicon Valley, including at Google and Yahoo!. Public speaker.
Location
🌐
Education
UC Santa Cruz Extension
Work
Developer Advocate at Weaviate, the open-source semantic search engine
Any technology that handles frontend caching/fetching/invalidation/mutations well is a good way forward.
Well put. One of those technologies is React Query, another is Apollo Client, and I bet that if you had read about Meteor, you would've included it too.
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Sure, that's technically true, but for the vast majority of practical intents and purposes, Meteor solves that sync problem and you don't have to write any code. There's certainly value in not reinventing a wheel that's very hard to get round, and a wide perspective of the problem would include full-stack frameworks even if they only offer a 99% solution to this.
Meteor offers more than just caching, including optimistic updates and real-time sync between all connected clients.
I personally haven't used Meteor but if it handles caching well, then I think I'd be in favor of using it.
I realize the title of this article kind of entices a technology flame war but that's not what my point is. It's that managing backend state yourself on the frontend, in the majority of cases, is probably not the best approach. Any technology that handles frontend caching/fetching/invalidation/mutations well is a good way forward.
Well put. One of those technologies is React Query, another is Apollo Client, and I bet that if you had read about Meteor, you would've included it too.