Meanwhile, your counterargument is well supported by data and facts.
Ah yes, the classic gotcha: why doesn’t the world’s largest economy, spanning a continent, look exactly like a country of 9 million that fits inside West Virginia? Truly a mystery. Next up: why doesn’t the US have…
Cool story bro. Of course it’s true if it made it to HN. Who needs proofs.
Virtually every country in this region was drawn up by the British and French with little regard for ethnic or religious boundaries. What are you talking about?
I'm jealous, then. I've seen all kinds of deranged Rube Goldberg machines built using useEffect
Plastics are rigid, while rubber (elastomers) is elastic. You might say this is nitpicking, but not everything that's potentially harmful in its dispersed form is plastic. Asbestos, coal dust, and sand dust are not…
That’s probably the main real-world use case for useEffect. Dedicated third-party libraries like React Query obviously use useEffect under the hood as well
That’s true. Just to note, I never claimed otherwise. See, useEffect is an evil remark. This is more based on my experience working with an average React codebase. As for your question, “Why does everyone suddenly try…
React is far from performant for SSR, and it simply can’t be, as it wasn’t designed with backend needs in mind. The fact that it works at all is more of a happy accident or side effect. Current approaches are more like…
Cannot agree more! Mastering React is ridiculously hard for what it is. There are so many “buts,” “it depends,” and subtle differences to navigate, like useEffect vs. useLayoutEffect. But don't forget useEffect is an…
Yet, it is still not literally a plastic by definition. I feel the term “plastic” is already demonized enough, and now it often serves as a generic umbrella term for alarmist purposes.
Rubber is not a plastic
Sorry, it just sounds like a seemingly reasonable and eloquent, yet highly emotional speculation. “There,” “here,” psychological obliteration—what is this but sciency reasoning, on par with boomers claiming, “Games make…
"Leave the multibillion dollar company alone!"
Meanwhile, your counterargument is well supported by data and facts.
Ah yes, the classic gotcha: why doesn’t the world’s largest economy, spanning a continent, look exactly like a country of 9 million that fits inside West Virginia? Truly a mystery. Next up: why doesn’t the US have…
Cool story bro. Of course it’s true if it made it to HN. Who needs proofs.
Virtually every country in this region was drawn up by the British and French with little regard for ethnic or religious boundaries. What are you talking about?
I'm jealous, then. I've seen all kinds of deranged Rube Goldberg machines built using useEffect
Plastics are rigid, while rubber (elastomers) is elastic. You might say this is nitpicking, but not everything that's potentially harmful in its dispersed form is plastic. Asbestos, coal dust, and sand dust are not…
That’s probably the main real-world use case for useEffect. Dedicated third-party libraries like React Query obviously use useEffect under the hood as well
That’s true. Just to note, I never claimed otherwise. See, useEffect is an evil remark. This is more based on my experience working with an average React codebase. As for your question, “Why does everyone suddenly try…
React is far from performant for SSR, and it simply can’t be, as it wasn’t designed with backend needs in mind. The fact that it works at all is more of a happy accident or side effect. Current approaches are more like…
Cannot agree more! Mastering React is ridiculously hard for what it is. There are so many “buts,” “it depends,” and subtle differences to navigate, like useEffect vs. useLayoutEffect. But don't forget useEffect is an…
Yet, it is still not literally a plastic by definition. I feel the term “plastic” is already demonized enough, and now it often serves as a generic umbrella term for alarmist purposes.
Rubber is not a plastic
Sorry, it just sounds like a seemingly reasonable and eloquent, yet highly emotional speculation. “There,” “here,” psychological obliteration—what is this but sciency reasoning, on par with boomers claiming, “Games make…
"Leave the multibillion dollar company alone!"