It has come time to read the liner notes and write some conclusions. When we started writing this blog series, we knew that JavaScript/web application frameworks were not easy to summarize.
In 2016 React cemented its position as king of the Javascript web frameworks. This year saw rapid growth of both its web and native mobile libraries, and a comfortable lead over main rival Angular…
This lesson shows what can be learned next as a continuation of this course, and gives a recap on the core concepts: main for pure logic, drivers for side effects, run() to connect main and drivers, sources for read effects, sinks for write effects, and nesting Cycle.js apps to work as components.
Continuing on from my previous article Want to learn JavaScript in 2015 / 2016. I’m going to walk you through what else I’ve been up to in the world of Javascript. Initially I’d planned to talk about…
There’s one question that comes up again and again on stackoverflow. The question is about ngDoCheck lifecycle hook that is triggered for a component that implements OnPush change detection strategy…
In the last couple of years there has been an explosion in JavaScript frameworks. How is a developer or business to make a wise choice? What are the advantages, trade-offs and differences? In this talk we’ll compare and contrast six popular front-end frameworks: Angular 1, Angular 2, Polymer, React, Ember and Aurelia.
Mithril is a modern client-side Javascript framework for building Single Page Applications. It's small (< 8kb gzip), fast and provides routing and XHR utilities out of the box.
Web components are made up of 4 separate specs, custom elements, shadow DOM, HTML imports, and the template tag. For the purposes of this article we will focus specifically on custom elements.