If there was an #HTML element that changes it's content when users interact with other elements on the page, what name would it have?
PLEASE NOTE: I am not suggesting that this element needs to exist; I am only asking what it would be called. I'm building a CustomElement, I just want it to have a name that makes sense.
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Given project Aspire is about orchestrating #dotnet applications, where does that leave teams who've decided on a polyglot approach to microservices with implementations written with #rust, #go, and #node? Probably not for those teams, right?
Folks, if you parrot opinions like "PHP is an insecure language" or "PHP has inherent security flaws" in 2024, and you can't point to specific issues with modern, current versions of PHP to back it up, all you are doing is demonstrating your ignorance.
The fact is, modern #PHP is every bit as secure, solid and performant a server-side #programming platform as #Node, #Python, or many other popular languages.
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.
Hmm I've only ever built sites using #Django, bcos I'm most good at #Python and I'm just super familiar with all the features (and quirks) of Django and it's been great, but honestly being good at only Django (when it comes to web dev) does gimme huge impostor syndrome cos I know fuck all when people talk about #Node and whatnot :(
Maybe I can learn how to build a site using #Eleventy so I too can speak gibberish lingo I never understood before with other fellow programmers?
Most tools written in the #Javascript / #Node / #npm spehere seems to assume they'll be used exclusively in that context. That means installation instructions often describes adding a dependency to a package.json file, etc. But.. I just want to lint some CSS over here. You've built a perfectly capable standalone tool, so provide a binary, will you?
So the #node module installed fine, VS Code sees it in my project, does type hinting, etc etc... but when I kick off the VS Code debugger it says it can't find the module.
It'd be easier to pull out my hair if I didn't shave my head twice a week.
I'm trying out https://runjs.app for prototyping js/node.js snippets locally.
Creating a new node project every time I just want to run a quick node.js snippet is just too time consuming.
Interested in any suggestions of similar tools js devs recommend. I know repl.it is another option, but running locally is a requirement for me. #js#webdev#node#tools
A Next.js app requires dozens of config files — next.config.js, eslintrc.json, tsconfig.json, package.json, postcss.config.js, tailwind.config.js, and more.
Why would you use #DDEV instead of a #Node or #Python server directly?
There are significant advantages to using a containerized setup like DDEV. We go over them in this article, and include a step-by-step guide to set it up.
@andy_blum helps introduce DDEV to a new audience that may not know about how useful it can be!
Is there an html tagged template library to render html on the server? I'm currently exploring @ lit-labs/ssr but I'd like to be aware of alternatives
Note: I don't need hydrate or client stuff, just a plain html string to string/stream/etc templating library
#TIL that you don't need the UUID #Node package to create random ID strings in #JavaScript. There's a built-in Crypto object, interface, and method for this!
*Ignore any formatting/data issues in my little web app; I've .only spent a few hours on it and it's still a WIP for learning purposes 😉
Best addition to any #Node package.json, #PHP composer.json or other dependency managers file would be a mandatory „why“ field for each single dependency which requires a minimum number of sensible words.
Could make devs think twice before adding and help (me) when upgrading projects after some time.