Web Dev full-stack [LAMP] since 2005, but much heavier on the JS stuff these days.
Jack of all Stacks, Master of some.
Always looking to learn new things. Always glad to help out, just ask.
Location
Atlanta, GA
Education
B.S. in Biochemistry 2004, M.S. in Computer Information Systems 2007
Components are tricky and can be complex, but we still don't need large frameworks to support them.
I wrote taino.netlify.app in under 30 hours about 2 years ago just to see what the least amount of JS needed is to build SPA websites. The core code can be used to make a 10 page blazing fast site in hours covering like 90% of websites. It's 13kb uncompressed and requires no npm installs, runs as a static site on any service like netlify/heroku/aws S3/digital ocean apps etc.
Since then i've used it on a few small test project and a proof of concept turned into a full scale product indiegameshowcase.org
So frameworks and compiling are really overkill for the web. I fully understand why Google and Facebook need them. With thousands of devs working on platforms processing a trillion requests a day...yes, go all out with code structuring and enforcement of standards.
For the every day dev making blogs, small ecomm, business brochure sites....there is no reason at all we should be using these bloated tools, unless you want a FAANG job I guess, which isn't the worst thing in the world. I just want people to know there are simpler options.
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Components are tricky and can be complex, but we still don't need large frameworks to support them.
I wrote taino.netlify.app in under 30 hours about 2 years ago just to see what the least amount of JS needed is to build SPA websites. The core code can be used to make a 10 page blazing fast site in hours covering like 90% of websites. It's 13kb uncompressed and requires no npm installs, runs as a static site on any service like netlify/heroku/aws S3/digital ocean apps etc.
Since then i've used it on a few small test project and a proof of concept turned into a full scale product indiegameshowcase.org
So frameworks and compiling are really overkill for the web. I fully understand why Google and Facebook need them. With thousands of devs working on platforms processing a trillion requests a day...yes, go all out with code structuring and enforcement of standards.
For the every day dev making blogs, small ecomm, business brochure sites....there is no reason at all we should be using these bloated tools, unless you want a FAANG job I guess, which isn't the worst thing in the world. I just want people to know there are simpler options.