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Content
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nickbytes pfp
nickbytes
@nickbytes.eth
Javascript still needs its Rails/Django equivalent. Next.js has empowered a bunch of frontend devs to build fullstack applications, but there’s a ton of footguns and the flexibility still has people floundering in problems long-solved by other frameworks.
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Alex Loukissas πŸ‰ pfp
Alex Loukissas πŸ‰
@futureartist
RedwoodJS has gotten the closest to this. Have you tried it?
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Leeward Bound pfp
Leeward Bound
@leewardbound
I have tried redwood extensively, I liked a lot of its usability features, it still doesn't hold a candle to the dev experience (and operational/management experience) of Django+graphene backend.
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Adam Hodges πŸ”΅-' pfp
Adam Hodges πŸ”΅-'
@hodges.eth
We've got all these beautiful languages on the backend, I don't understand why anyone would go with a JS framework 🀒
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nickbytes pfp
nickbytes
@nickbytes.eth
hah that's bait
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Leeward Bound pfp
Leeward Bound
@leewardbound
What's sad is that TS has *great* DX, I prefer writing TS to even Python because the typing system is so πŸ”₯ - but the whole ecosystem sucks as soon as you need to import a system library, install any dependency, connect to a DB, etc etc etc
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