What are we talking about? If we can’t write a pure JS application that runs on a browser without performance issues than the problem is most likely the code and not the fact that it isn’t compiled. It’s not like an extra 500KB of data will slow down anything on a world where people have 12GB of RAM on phones and gigabit speeds on almost everything.
I believe the price we pay by going into the compile/build is much larger than those few KB. Today everything works, tomorrow half of your compilation steps are broken because xyz package is no longe available, dead, replaced… JS was meant to be interpreted not compiled.
Look I get that this compile/build hype in JS resulted from the fact that people wanted to workaround missing features on the language, I also get that it may make development faster but now in 2024 we should really reconsider this and simplify things. JS and CSS evolved a LOT.
It’s more to do with larger teams. Frameworks should make it easier for multiple people to work on a codebase. As well as allowing much larger apps with less complexity.
Yeah but the power from a compile step comes at build time.
It’s the reason we don’t write in binary anymore. But binary is faster to deploy.
What are we talking about? If we can’t write a pure JS application that runs on a browser without performance issues than the problem is most likely the code and not the fact that it isn’t compiled. It’s not like an extra 500KB of data will slow down anything on a world where people have 12GB of RAM on phones and gigabit speeds on almost everything.
I believe the price we pay by going into the compile/build is much larger than those few KB. Today everything works, tomorrow half of your compilation steps are broken because xyz package is no longe available, dead, replaced… JS was meant to be interpreted not compiled.
Look I get that this compile/build hype in JS resulted from the fact that people wanted to workaround missing features on the language, I also get that it may make development faster but now in 2024 we should really reconsider this and simplify things. JS and CSS evolved a LOT.
It’s more to do with larger teams. Frameworks should make it easier for multiple people to work on a codebase. As well as allowing much larger apps with less complexity.
Yes but why do they have to be compiled? For what’s worth jQuery is a framework and so is Vue without compiling.
Usually because they have their own way of defining things that isn’t standard JS.
For instance Vue can be compiled if you want to make full SPAs using it.
You can build SPAs without compilation…