Thank you @jeremylikness
for this great post. I have one question about bundling and minification or js and html files. Is it possible with this approach to bundle everything together? While the app loads very fast, I see that it makes a lot of network connections. It would be beneficial to know for for apps of a greater size we can use bundling and minification for greater performance. Thank you.
Hi! I am a longtime developer with a passion to empower other developers to be their best. I focus on cloud development and everything related to data access from .NET and .NET Core.
I would just be careful about performance for the sake of performance. If you are talking 300ms of difference, that is something tangible and observable in the UI. I find too often people want to makes things smaller/faster "just because" and end up investing time and energy into optimizations without empirical evidence they are needed. Having said that, WebPack or other bundlers can handle Vanilla.js just fine!
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Thank you @jeremylikness for this great post. I have one question about bundling and minification or js and html files. Is it possible with this approach to bundle everything together? While the app loads very fast, I see that it makes a lot of network connections. It would be beneficial to know for for apps of a greater size we can use bundling and minification for greater performance. Thank you.
I would just be careful about performance for the sake of performance. If you are talking 300ms of difference, that is something tangible and observable in the UI. I find too often people want to makes things smaller/faster "just because" and end up investing time and energy into optimizations without empirical evidence they are needed. Having said that, WebPack or other bundlers can handle Vanilla.js just fine!