#656 — September 28, 2023 |
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JavaScript Weekly |
The Saga of Google's Closure Compiler — Dan looks back at Google’s Closure Compiler, a JavaScript transpiler Google built in 2004 and used most heavily in the pre-TypeScript era to reduce the size of JavaScript files, check types, and otherwise handle common pitfalls. A neat bit of JavaScript history. Dan Vanderkam |
Speeding up the JavaScript Ecosystem: Polyfills Gone Rogue — Marvin's mission to speed up popular libraries continues. First blogging on the topic last year, now he’s looking at the role polyfills play in making packages large and inefficient. There are two sides to every story, though, as this Hacker News thread found. Marvin Hagemeister |
Building Cross-Platform Desktop Apps with Electron — In this detailed video course Steve Kinney shares how to build robust, user-friendly Electron-based desktop apps, covering key concepts like main and renderer processes, inter-process communication, security, and more. Frontend Masters sponsor |
⚡️ IN BRIEF:
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🎉 RELEASES:
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📒 Articles & Tutorials |
One Thing Nobody Explained To You About TypeScript — The author makes a strong case for creating a separate Artem Zakharchenko |
Upgrading Frontend Dependencies with Confidence — Writing tests for logic in our apps is easy, but how can you determine if a component isn't rendering properly? Visual regression testing. Here's a workflow based on GitHub Actions, Playwright, and Argos. Sébastien Lorber |
React Authentication — Without Complexity — Userfront streamlines authentication & access control so engineers can focus on their core business. Read the docs now. Userfront sponsor |
Understanding the Modulo Josh W Comeau |
⏱ Why the Temporal API is Awesome — It’s still a stage 3 proposal, but the Temporal API works around some of Taro Dragan |
Drawing on Google Maps with Drawing Manager — A particularly thorough, code-rich followup to Integrating Google Maps in React. Pavlo Chabanenko (Sudolabs) |
Thoughts on Svelte 5 as a 3+ Year Full-Time Svelte Dev — Thoughts that lead to the proposal of Pelte, an attempt to spark conversation rather than a real tool (so far). Filip Tangen |
The Forecast For Your Next Database: Strongly Typed and Cloudy EdgeDB sponsor |
Building Token Based Authentication with JWTs on Fastify
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The Angular Renaissance: Why Frontend Devs Should Revisit It
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How React Server Components Made Our Site Faster
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Replacing RxJS with a State Machine
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🛠 Code & Tools |
Tesseract.js 5.0: JavaScript OCR for 100+ Languages — A port of the C++-based Tesseract library used to extract text from images. v5.0 is a big deal as there are huge file size reductions resulting in a 50% decrease in runtime size, a similar reduction in memory use, and iOS 17 compatiblity. GitHub repo. Tesseract Team |
ChatGPT.js: A Library for Working with ChatGPT via the DOM — Includes a fairly extensive API that lets you interact with ChatGPT for use in Chrome extensions, Tampermonkey scripts, and so on. KudoAI |
Industry-Leading JavaScript Components for the Web — Build your apps with powerful JavaScript developer tools including reporting solutions, spreadsheets, and UI components. GrapeCity sponsor |
Instant.dev: A New Postgres-Focused ORM for JavaScript — Aims to introduce a more Ruby on Rails/Active Record-style experience to the increasingly rich JavaScript ORM ecosystem. instant․dev |
Chardet 2.0: Character Encoding Detection Library — It uses statistical methods to determine the most likely encoding of a supplied buffer, string, or file, from a selection of about 30. Dmitry Shirokov |
👾 n64js: A Nintendo 64 Emulator in JavaScript — There’s a Web-based version to try (if you have the right files) or just ▶️ watch a video. Paul Holden |
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🕹 The hardest JavaScript game ever? |
JS Crush: Match Values That Are Equal in JS — The author’s comment that this is “a game that mocks JS equality quirks, the most absurd feature of the language” should put you in the right frame of mind for giving this Candy Crush-inspired casual game a go! Herrington Darkholme |
P.S. I'm encountering folks who haven't heard about the ▶️ TypeScript Origins documentary we featured last week, so I wanted to mention it again in case you have the time spare. I enjoyed it and learned a lot too. |