VitePress is a Static Site Generator (SSG) that takes #Markdown, applies a theme to it, and generates static HTML pages. Built on #Vue. #JavaScript#VueJS
When I started #Questlog the plan was to use the same tech stack as we use at work to use learnings from private projects for work and vice versa.
But Questlog doesn't have to be a single page app. And this annoys me. I have to go the extra mile for so many things that just should work.
I really think about completely rewrite the front end with #Laravel#Livewire instead of #Vue.js with #Inertia in between.
I would definitely have to think more to achieve some things I currently do, but the result would be a much faster and smaller page that isn't completely dependent on JavaScript. Most of the stuff I do would probably completely doable without JS these days.
Well, that fucking sucks. I just went into my o3 meeting with the boss and was told that I don't have a job anymore. If anybody is looking for an experienced #vue / #node / #php dev in the #Milwaukee area (or remote), let me know.
This is my second try to move to Mastodon or at least to try to convince myself to use it instead of X. Do you have any recommendations for whom I should follow? I'm interested in #webdev#frontend#javascript#react#vue#next#nuxt
phanpy.social is cool, very well-designed, but after trying it for a couple days I still think I prefer Elk. Phanpy is just too slow. Every action has several seconds of lag, especially after scrolling for a while. And this makes it completely unusable on mobile.
I wonder if this is related to their tech stacks. Phanpy uses Preact, Elk uses Vue. React sites always feel slow. I'm not very familiar with Vue, but this is a point in favor of it. Elk always feels snappy.
Honestly getting really discouraged by all these layoffs. I had high hopes in the beginning because companies typically do a lot of hiring in Q1, but with big tech companies doing sweeping layoffs again the market is being flooded with highly qualified devs.
That being said, if you need an experienced engineer, I'm here.
2019: react is dead (5M downloads)
2020: react is dead (6M downloads)
2021: react is dead (10M downloads)
2022: react is dead? (15M downloads)
2023: react is … wait (22M downloads)
it’s been bizarre as a person wishing a future without #react for years now, seeing React gain even more marketshare as #vue and #svelte’s growth stall
React comes with unnecessary bloat, has no built-in styling solution, no official toolchain, and unnecessarily abstracts HTML in the dumbest ways. I can’t for the life of me understand why a better solution (Svelte) hasn’t replaced it by now