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#thoughts
What a perfect time to be a developer.
Apple just issued unusual shares/bonuses to some of their engineers ranging from 50k to 180k USD in an attempt to retain their workforce (right after Meta or ex-Facebook grabbed 100+ engineers from Apple)
Don't think I've ever seen such an impulse in the industry for a need in devs.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-12-28/apple-pays-unusual-180-000-bonuses-to-retain-engineering-talent
What a perfect time to be a developer.
Apple just issued unusual shares/bonuses to some of their engineers ranging from 50k to 180k USD in an attempt to retain their workforce (right after Meta or ex-Facebook grabbed 100+ engineers from Apple)
Don't think I've ever seen such an impulse in the industry for a need in devs.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-12-28/apple-pays-unusual-180-000-bonuses-to-retain-engineering-talent
β€10π€©4π’3π©1
If you update telegram, you now will be able to react to posts (and not use those "reaction buttons")
π₯195π±53π€©44π40π©28β€23π’7
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#learn
Did you know that every time you change an element's height the maximum rendering cycle will be necessary?
If your user has a display of 120 FPS you pretty much have a 4ms window to complete the rendering cycle (per frame), if your app fails to do that youβll inevitably see unsmooth motion and jitter = poor user experience.
Things like that we typically start thinking about when we add complexity to our apps with a lot of changing elements in our DOM.
A great article on this
π 12 min
If you can take 1 practical learning from this, Iβd say try to utilise
Next time you want to increase
Did you know that every time you change an element's height the maximum rendering cycle will be necessary?
If your user has a display of 120 FPS you pretty much have a 4ms window to complete the rendering cycle (per frame), if your app fails to do that youβll inevitably see unsmooth motion and jitter = poor user experience.
Things like that we typically start thinking about when we add complexity to our apps with a lot of changing elements in our DOM.
A great article on this
π 12 min
If you can take 1 practical learning from this, Iβd say try to utilise
transform, opacity and filter properties as much as you can instead of e.g. height/width or position. Iβve personally caught myself relying on position properties too much whereas using transform with translate can be less obvious, but so much better for performance.Next time you want to increase
height/width try using scale and when using eg left consider translateβ€30π€©8π©1
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#thoughts
You've probably already heard of Marak - an open source dev who corrupted his widely used repo (
More on the story
Mark's justification TLDR: world is unfair, monetising open source is hard.
This reminds me of a situation when someone started to add ads in a terminal and got into so much problems with the community.
This is an important precedent though, showing that we probably might be relying too much on open source and current module's versioning creates a room for blowups with just minor version auto updates.
At the same time, I can understand the frustration the guy had.
What do you guys think? Share in comments.
My humble opinion here is super simple - if you are not happy with the money you get for your work, then open source is probably not the right place.
PS I also find it interesting that he had a bug in his initial "fuck it all up" attempt
You've probably already heard of Marak - an open source dev who corrupted his widely used repo (
faker.js and colors) that in return blew up tons of projects that had it as a dependency / peer dependency.More on the story
Mark's justification TLDR: world is unfair, monetising open source is hard.
This reminds me of a situation when someone started to add ads in a terminal and got into so much problems with the community.
This is an important precedent though, showing that we probably might be relying too much on open source and current module's versioning creates a room for blowups with just minor version auto updates.
At the same time, I can understand the frustration the guy had.
What do you guys think? Share in comments.
My humble opinion here is super simple - if you are not happy with the money you get for your work, then open source is probably not the right place.
PS I also find it interesting that he had a bug in his initial "fuck it all up" attempt
π’8π±6π©2
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#learn
Going deeper
Always interested to see people taking a deep dive and exploring tech beyond documentation.
Our comrade @fromaline wrote two great articles in a series on exploring React internals.
Episode 1 - why React was created and what was the idea behind it (also pls read if you haven't heard what reconcilers are in React)
Episode 2 - what is the most popular npm package, that lives in the React monorepo?
Super interesting reading that deserves your attention π₯
Going deeper
Always interested to see people taking a deep dive and exploring tech beyond documentation.
Our comrade @fromaline wrote two great articles in a series on exploring React internals.
Episode 1 - why React was created and what was the idea behind it (also pls read if you haven't heard what reconcilers are in React)
Episode 2 - what is the most popular npm package, that lives in the React monorepo?
Super interesting reading that deserves your attention π₯
π₯21β€3π€©2π©1
#uiux
A simple hack, but too powerful.
Avoiding that extra click after inputting your code is what creates a "wow, nice" effect π₯.
Worst case scenario - users will see an error if the code didn't match (but that can easily happen even with the button)
PS if your code is 12 characters long this is likely not gonna work as nice π
A simple hack, but too powerful.
Avoiding that extra click after inputting your code is what creates a "wow, nice" effect π₯.
Worst case scenario - users will see an error if the code didn't match (but that can easily happen even with the button)
PS if your code is 12 characters long this is likely not gonna work as nice π
π₯24β€4
TheFrontEndπ₯
#learn Going deeper Always interested to see people taking a deep dive and exploring tech beyond documentation. Our comrade @fromaline wrote two great articles in a series on exploring React internals. Episode 1 - why React was created and what was theβ¦
#learn
Next episode is out. While the first 2 got you prepared and focus, this one actually dives deep inside react monorepo and reverse engineer the most popular React snippet.
Ever seen the below?
Kudos to @fromaline and waiting for the next one π₯
π Link
π 17 min
Next episode is out. While the first 2 got you prepared and focus, this one actually dives deep inside react monorepo and reverse engineer the most popular React snippet.
Ever seen the below?
ReactDOM.render(<App />,
document.getElementById('root'));Kudos to @fromaline and waiting for the next one π₯
π Link
π 17 min
β€3
#learn
What if I tell you that since
Have you ever tried that? Answer in comments.
What if I tell you that since
console.log returns undefined you actually donβt need to suffer - adding braces, enters, return etc when trying to log something within arrow function?Have you ever tried that? Answer in comments.
π₯29π±10
β€6π₯2π’2π1
#thoughts
I really don't get why React devs use chrome debugger this days. You know, the tool in chrome that allows you to set breakpoints and "pause the world" checking local scope, variables etc. Don't confuse it with styles and elements tabs. I mean the "sources" tab specifically.
In 2022, I personally find myself mostly in vscode, its mostly React development for me, so I have React & Redux chrome extensions. At any point I can jump at a specific redux action, check the global store, check all the components, what props are being passed around etc. When I'm feeling ambitious I'll use breakpoints in vscode directly, checking the lifecycles and pausing the app where investigation is needed.
And that's where things get confusing for me, why would I do that in chrome? Of course you can edit your code in chrome and apply changes, but that always felt for me like a duplication (scrolling through code in browser AND editor)
How are you guys using chrome debugger? π Do you find it useful?
I really don't get why React devs use chrome debugger this days. You know, the tool in chrome that allows you to set breakpoints and "pause the world" checking local scope, variables etc. Don't confuse it with styles and elements tabs. I mean the "sources" tab specifically.
In 2022, I personally find myself mostly in vscode, its mostly React development for me, so I have React & Redux chrome extensions. At any point I can jump at a specific redux action, check the global store, check all the components, what props are being passed around etc. When I'm feeling ambitious I'll use breakpoints in vscode directly, checking the lifecycles and pausing the app where investigation is needed.
And that's where things get confusing for me, why would I do that in chrome? Of course you can edit your code in chrome and apply changes, but that always felt for me like a duplication (scrolling through code in browser AND editor)
How are you guys using chrome debugger? π Do you find it useful?
β€2
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π₯41π±19π©15β€14
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#thoughts
If you are a fan of console.log, you must be using turbo console log.
All you need is to set it up in 1 min for the right shortcut / linter and enjoy it.
One feature I particularly enjoy is deleting all console logs with just one shortcut π₯
https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ChakrounAnas.turbo-console-log
If you are a fan of console.log, you must be using turbo console log.
All you need is to set it up in 1 min for the right shortcut / linter and enjoy it.
One feature I particularly enjoy is deleting all console logs with just one shortcut π₯
https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ChakrounAnas.turbo-console-log
π₯28β€4π©2
#thoughts
So state of JS results are out for anyone who haven't seen them:
https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/libraries/front-end-frameworks
If you get asked what to learn when starting or which tool/framework is better, I find it useful to point the person to this kind of results. And they can decide what they want eg learn smth new and cool, get a job, play around etc.
React is quite stable in its high scores over usage (can't say the same on satisfaction).
"Vite" looks like it can be the next big thing at this point, but we'll see.
PS also that link has mentions of what people usually read in dev space, who they follow and what podcasts listen to (which is always great to explore π)
PPS Their data visualisation is pretty sick π₯
So state of JS results are out for anyone who haven't seen them:
https://2021.stateofjs.com/en-US/libraries/front-end-frameworks
If you get asked what to learn when starting or which tool/framework is better, I find it useful to point the person to this kind of results. And they can decide what they want eg learn smth new and cool, get a job, play around etc.
React is quite stable in its high scores over usage (can't say the same on satisfaction).
"Vite" looks like it can be the next big thing at this point, but we'll see.
PS also that link has mentions of what people usually read in dev space, who they follow and what podcasts listen to (which is always great to explore π)
PPS Their data visualisation is pretty sick π₯
β€9π©1
#thoughts
And just to make it easier for the lasier ones here. Those are the people to follow βοΈ
How many names do you recognise?
And just to make it easier for the lasier ones here. Those are the people to follow βοΈ
How many names do you recognise?
β€7
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π₯40β€8π€©4π±3
Those who work with React Native. How do you prefer to debug it?
Anonymous Poll
7%
debugger-ui
26%
React Native Debugger
7%
Flipper
3%
Logbox
2%
Other (in comments)
56%
See results
#personal
Alright ladies and gentlemen, I'm gonna make it interactive now (finally) π
I've been reviewing 7+ UI libraries for React Native for work in the past few days.
Those who don't give a shit about React Native, welcome to the club π and treat it as UI lib contest for mobile apps.
Judging by the poll above not giving a shit about React Native is what unites us here.
Next 3 posts will be, my 2 final contestants
And survey for you which one you'd personally prefer.
Now, you can base your choice literally on anything - simply like their components, typescript support, design system, number of releases, integration smoothness, years in the industry, country of origin etc etc.
If you feel like sharing your thoughts on why you would choose one over the other, feel free - I'm personally interested as I have my own justification for our business/project. Can also share if some find it interesting.
Maybe I actually will, especially if you choose the other one π
Give me a few mins to find some pics and create the posts, come back 15 mins later.
Alright ladies and gentlemen, I'm gonna make it interactive now (finally) π
I've been reviewing 7+ UI libraries for React Native for work in the past few days.
Those who don't give a shit about React Native, welcome to the club π and treat it as UI lib contest for mobile apps.
Judging by the poll above not giving a shit about React Native is what unites us here.
Next 3 posts will be, my 2 final contestants
And survey for you which one you'd personally prefer.
Now, you can base your choice literally on anything - simply like their components, typescript support, design system, number of releases, integration smoothness, years in the industry, country of origin etc etc.
If you feel like sharing your thoughts on why you would choose one over the other, feel free - I'm personally interested as I have my own justification for our business/project. Can also share if some find it interesting.
Maybe I actually will, especially if you choose the other one π
Give me a few mins to find some pics and create the posts, come back 15 mins later.
β€3
#personal
Option number 1 - Native Base
https://nativebase.io/
A great selection of components, cool hooks out of the box and utility props. Also marketplace?
βοΈCheck the link. Don't just base it on what I write here.
Option number 1 - Native Base
https://nativebase.io/
A great selection of components, cool hooks out of the box and utility props. Also marketplace?
βοΈCheck the link. Don't just base it on what I write here.
π©4β€1
#personal
Option 2 - Kitten UI
https://akveo.github.io/react-native-ui-kitten/
Based on beautiful Eva design. Super lightweight. Does what you'd expect from UI library.
βοΈCheck the link. Don't just base it on what I write here.
Option 2 - Kitten UI
https://akveo.github.io/react-native-ui-kitten/
Based on beautiful Eva design. Super lightweight. Does what you'd expect from UI library.
βοΈCheck the link. Don't just base it on what I write here.
Let the battle begin. Imagine you are choosing a UI lib for your mobile app project. Which one would you go for?
Anonymous Poll
33%
1 - Native Base
20%
2 - Kitten UI
48%
See results
#promo
inqoob - new chatbot builder π¦Ύ
An international team of marketers and developers took into account all the shortcomings of bot creation services and launched their own, which closes the key problems of users.
Now the beta version is ready. And the first team of testers is recruited
Subscribe to the channel - do not miss the new release.
Well, to make it even more exciting, the guys are launching an Accelerator from idea to startup. If you've been dreaming of becoming a startup, welcome to inqoob. Monetize ideas with an international team of developers.
Here is the link π
https://tg-me.sbs/+Wy341jkvLWIzOTky
inqoob - new chatbot builder π¦Ύ
An international team of marketers and developers took into account all the shortcomings of bot creation services and launched their own, which closes the key problems of users.
Now the beta version is ready. And the first team of testers is recruited
Subscribe to the channel - do not miss the new release.
Well, to make it even more exciting, the guys are launching an Accelerator from idea to startup. If you've been dreaming of becoming a startup, welcome to inqoob. Monetize ideas with an international team of developers.
Here is the link π
https://tg-me.sbs/+Wy341jkvLWIzOTky
β€1