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On this episode, Sacha Greif, designer, developer, and entrepreneur, talks about the state of JavaScript in 2023 survey results. We discuss trends in the JavaScript ecosystem and the future of popular frameworks and tools. Learn about the challenges and innovations shaping the world of JavaScript today. Links https://stateofjs.com https://sachagreif.com https://github.com/sachag http://twitter.com/sachagreif https://jp.linkedin.com/in/sacha-greif We want to hear from you! How did you find us? Did you see us on Twitter? In a newsletter? Or maybe we were recommended by a friend? Let us know by sending an email to our producer, Emily, at emily.kochanekketner@logrocket.com (mailto:emily.kochanekketner@logrocket.com), or tweet at us at PodRocketPod (https://twitter.com/PodRocketpod). Follow us. Get free stickers. Follow us on Apple Podcasts, fill out this form (https://podrocket.logrocket.com/get-podrocket-stickers), and we'll send you free PodRocket stickers! What does LogRocket do? LogRocket provides AI-first session replay and analytics that surfaces the UX and technical issues impacting user experiences. Start understand where your users are struggling by trying it for free at [LogRocket.com]. Try LogRocket for free today.(https://logrocket.com/signup/?pdr) Special Guest: Sacha Greif.
On today's show, we reflect on the YouTube video, 15 Years of Dev in a Nutshell. A few years ago, people were complaining about "JavaScript Fatigue" - this sense that there was a new JavaScript library or framework coming out every day; and, that the race to stay up-to-date in the industry was simply overwhelming. Now, take that feeling, and expand it to include everything in a web development career, from front-end frameworks to databases to server-side rendering to edge-computing. It's a lot! And, it's easy to feel that we engineers are "Juniors for Life": always learning, always evolving, and — perhaps — never really mastering anything?Follow the show and be sure to join the discussion on Discord! Our website is workingcode.dev and we're @WorkingCodePod on Twitter and Instagram. New episodes drop weekly on Wednesday.And, if you're feeling the love, support us on Patreon.With audio editing and engineering by ZCross Media.
Mike explores the state of Xamarin.Android development on Linux, and we talk frameworks versus libraries and what Rails got right. Plus adventures with rust on MacOS, your feedback, and more!
Mikeal Rogers, Alex Sexton, and Rachel White discuss JavaScript Fatigue, Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP), and the project of the week Paths.js
Mikeal Rogers, Alex Sexton, and Rachel White discuss JavaScript Fatigue, Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP), and the project of the week Paths.js
In episode 68 of Does Not Compute, Sean and Paul talk about how you should check your data backups right this instant, Heroku Pipelines, Rails Form Helpers vs. Spas, and how changing your focus just a bit can bring you relief from Javascript Fatigue
On this episode of Eat Sleep Code, guest Todd Motto talks about overcoming JavaScript fatigue. With dozens of new JavaScript frameworks, tools, package managers, and task runners in the ecosystem, how do developers decide on a framework and move forward with a project. Find the full transcript on Telerik Developer Network http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/overcoming-javascript-fatigue/ Ed Charbeneau: Hello, and welcome to Eat Sleep Code, the official Telerik podcast, I'm your host Ed Charbeneau and with me today is Todd Motto. Hi Todd. Todd Motto: Hey Ed. 00:22 EC: Today we're gonna be talking about JavaScript fatigue. Todd, I brought you on the show today because you are a new team member for Telerik and you're working with JavaScript and Kendo UI, and I thought it'd be a great time to talk about overcoming JavaScript fatigue. And let's talk about that in a moment, but first let's do some introductions, tell us a little bit about yourself and what you do. 00:51 TM: Cool. Yeah, thanks for having me on the show. I'm a new member to the team as you mentioned. I'm over in England, I cover the developer advocate scene in the UK, and parts of Europe and hopefully a little bit further across the pond and over in the US. So yeah, I'm working on the Kendo UI side of things, we'll be diving into the NativeScript as well. There's also the React stuff, and Angular 1 and Angular 2 integrations, so I'll be heavily involved with. So, it's gonna be an exciting year. 02:12 EC: Yeah. Alright man, so we wanted to talk about JavaScript fatigue today. Let's kick it off by explaining what JavaScript fatigue even is. 02:26 TM: Yes. So I think… Well, at the moment, there's this JavaScript fatigue you could probably do a search for it on a Twitter search and get new tweets on it every minute. I think we're just in this JavaScript boom at the moment where there's so many frameworks, and so many new features and tooling, and libraries, and all this stuff that's happening daily and everybody is sort of recommending new things to do. The day before yesterday I was… I'd recently switched over from using Sublime Text to using Atom, and obviously everyone has their own favorite text editor, but everyone's sort of like, "Why don't you try this, why don't you try this, why don't you try this editor instead?" And it's the exact same thing that happens with the JavaScript scene. You might say, "Oh, I've just built this on Angular." And somebody will go, "Why didn't you do in this, why didn't you do it in React? Why didn't you do this? Why didn't you use Flux?" Do you know what I mean? It gives a developer, especially a new developer, to the community like somebody who's come from a jQuery background that builds website to then joining like a software engineering team that builds software in a browser, so web application side of things, to make a jump. 03:37 TM: And then there's this kind of "Which way do I go down?" The path used to be quite clear a couple of years ago, there used to be a couple of frameworks that were sort of the industry leaders and then everybody kinda got a bit smarter and said, "Oh, you know what? I'm actually going to create my own framework or my own version of this framework, and I'm gonna make it 100 times smaller, that's my aim." And then React came out, and then Angular 2 is on its way, and there's all the tooling associated with it. I think instead of just maybe five paths that we had a couple of years ago, we have got 500 paths, and then we've got all the tooling around it. So that's my nutshell definition of JavaScript fatigue, is which way do you go, then when you choose a path, you then go another 500 paths so you can choose either with build tools and back-ends, and web servers, and all this kind of thing. http://developer.telerik.com/content-types/podcast/overcoming-javascript-fatigue/
Check out Freelance Remote Conf and React Remote Conf! 02:34 - Rob Eisenberg Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:23 - Aurelia 04:28 - Conventions and Configurations 19:15 - 2015: “The Year of the Framework” 23:46 - Databinding and Unit Directional Data Flow 27:56 - Advice for Framework Developers React Cycle.js 32:52 - Tool Fatigue JavaScript Fatigue and Keeping Up with Modern Development 43:32 - Change Detection 45:22 - Aurelia Interface Picks AngularConnect (Joe) Why Composer John Williams Knows More About Star Wars Than You Do (Joe) LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens Game (Joe) Angular 1 and AngularFire (Joe) The Aurelia Docs (Ward) OhYeah! ONE Bar (Lukas) Joe Eames: How Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) is Changing the Face of Web Development (Lukas) The Auralia Website (Lukas) RushMyPassport (Chuck) Mogo Portable Seat (Chuck) The Malazan Book of the Fallen (Rob) Scholastic Metaphysics: A Contemporary Introduction by Edward Feser (Rob) Attack on Titan Vol. 2 by Hajime Isayama (Rob)
Check out Freelance Remote Conf and React Remote Conf! 02:34 - Rob Eisenberg Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:23 - Aurelia 04:28 - Conventions and Configurations 19:15 - 2015: “The Year of the Framework” 23:46 - Databinding and Unit Directional Data Flow 27:56 - Advice for Framework Developers React Cycle.js 32:52 - Tool Fatigue JavaScript Fatigue and Keeping Up with Modern Development 43:32 - Change Detection 45:22 - Aurelia Interface Picks AngularConnect (Joe) Why Composer John Williams Knows More About Star Wars Than You Do (Joe) LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens Game (Joe) Angular 1 and AngularFire (Joe) The Aurelia Docs (Ward) OhYeah! ONE Bar (Lukas) Joe Eames: How Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) is Changing the Face of Web Development (Lukas) The Auralia Website (Lukas) RushMyPassport (Chuck) Mogo Portable Seat (Chuck) The Malazan Book of the Fallen (Rob) Scholastic Metaphysics: A Contemporary Introduction by Edward Feser (Rob) Attack on Titan Vol. 2 by Hajime Isayama (Rob)
Check out Freelance Remote Conf and React Remote Conf! 02:34 - Rob Eisenberg Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog 03:23 - Aurelia 04:28 - Conventions and Configurations 19:15 - 2015: “The Year of the Framework” 23:46 - Databinding and Unit Directional Data Flow 27:56 - Advice for Framework Developers React Cycle.js 32:52 - Tool Fatigue JavaScript Fatigue and Keeping Up with Modern Development 43:32 - Change Detection 45:22 - Aurelia Interface Picks AngularConnect (Joe) Why Composer John Williams Knows More About Star Wars Than You Do (Joe) LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens Game (Joe) Angular 1 and AngularFire (Joe) The Aurelia Docs (Ward) OhYeah! ONE Bar (Lukas) Joe Eames: How Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) is Changing the Face of Web Development (Lukas) The Auralia Website (Lukas) RushMyPassport (Chuck) Mogo Portable Seat (Chuck) The Malazan Book of the Fallen (Rob) Scholastic Metaphysics: A Contemporary Introduction by Edward Feser (Rob) Attack on Titan Vol. 2 by Hajime Isayama (Rob)