Interesting, I cooked up something similar a few years ago to use on my personal website and d3.js viz projects. Originally for use with webpack/babel but now I use it exclusively with Vite.
I'd like to understand when the term "DX" was popularized. It certainly feels like it was a rather recent invention and often tied to a tool or platform to get locked into.
If I were into conspiracies, I would hazard a guess the term "DX" was created by a marketing department for a PaaS.
I agree :D Do you have a better term for a thing that does not want to be a framework? Maybe it's really just code snippets. It's also not really an API, because the API is the DOM. :thinking:
Interesting, I cooked up something similar a few years ago to use on my personal website and d3.js viz projects. Originally for use with webpack/babel but now I use it exclusively with Vite.
https://www.npmjs.com/package/jsx-pragma
Nice work! JSX is such an awesome piece of technology. Using it with the dom feels like a component based and maintainable jquery.
Isn't there xss in the first demo? What if title is user supplied and it's something like <script>alert("xss")</script>
User supplied stuff must always be sanitized :)
I'd like to understand when the term "DX" was popularized. It certainly feels like it was a rather recent invention and often tied to a tool or platform to get locked into.
If I were into conspiracies, I would hazard a guess the term "DX" was created by a marketing department for a PaaS.
For me great DX is when the editor provides useful information about my code. :)
API would be the proper term for this, no?
Maybe "typed API"?
What do you mean?
"non framework" just seems like a weird term
I agree :D Do you have a better term for a thing that does not want to be a framework? Maybe it's really just code snippets. It's also not really an API, because the API is the DOM. :thinking:
There is no way to not be a framework. A bunch of code snippets is already one.