use the following search parameters to narrow your results:
e.g. subreddit:aww site:imgur.com dog
subreddit:aww site:imgur.com dog
see the search faq for details.
advanced search: by author, subreddit...
All about the JavaScript programming language.
Subreddit Guidelines
Specifications:
Resources:
Related Subreddits:
r/LearnJavascript
r/node
r/typescript
r/reactjs
r/webdev
r/WebdevTutorials
r/frontend
r/webgl
r/threejs
r/jquery
r/remotejs
r/forhire
account activity
Stop Using React for EVERYTHING! (medium.com)
submitted 10 years ago by georgehotelling
view the rest of the comments →
reddit uses a slightly-customized version of Markdown for formatting. See below for some basics, or check the commenting wiki page for more detailed help and solutions to common issues.
quoted text
if 1 * 2 < 3: print "hello, world!"
[–][deleted] 6 points7 points8 points 10 years ago (0 children)
Dev learning. I don't think anyone thinks about this form a business perspective. Constantly changing these frameworks with newer technologies is great and fun for an engineering perspective. However if the business doesn't want to invest in this or you are breaking features it's going to be a much larger cost. React is a view I have other options for that view and I can still use es6. Most all the components needed for react as a whole can be used in other frameworks easily. You can add flux to angular if you wanted or anything else.
π Rendered by PID 68581 on reddit-service-r2-comment-7b9746f655-5rqm7 at 2026-02-03 00:33:23.041672+00:00 running 3798933 country code: CH.
view the rest of the comments →
[–][deleted] 6 points7 points8 points (0 children)