Psst.. if you’re wondering about the context of today’s subject line, see the first ⚡️ In Brief. |
Angular v16 Released — With the “biggest release since the initial rollout of Angular”, v16 of the extensive framework introduces a preview of a new signals-based reactivity model (a.k.a. Angular Signals), RxJS interop, improved SSR and hydration, experimental esbuild support, Jest unit testing, and more. Minko Gechev |
💡 See the end of this issue where Minko makes the case for Angular in 2023. |
Qwik Reaches v1.0 — In “other big JS frameworks that aren’t React” news, Qwik has hit a major milestone too. Qwik’s selling point remains performance through serving up as little code as needed on initial page load. “Think of it as streaming for your JavaScript,” they say. Nonetheless, you get the JSX, directory-based routing, and middleware options you may be familiar with. Qwik Team |
Bring Your Team from Zero to 100 Deploys a Day — Curious about how companies such as Atlassian, Google, and Netflix deploy hundreds of times a day? What strategies do they use to achieve efficiency? This guide provides you with tips and tricks on how these companies scaled their deployments so that you can do the same. Sleuth |
⚡️ IN BRIEF:
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RELEASES: |
📒 Articles & Tutorials |
A Practical Guide to Not Blocking the Event Loop — Engines typically run JavaScript in a single thread with an event loop. However, the nature of mixing synchronous and asynchronous tasks, along with the increasing popularity of workers for running code on separate threads, makes the landscape harder to navigate than it used to be. Slava Knyazev |
The Josh W Comeau |
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QUICK RELEASES: |
🗣 A quick word from Angular’s Minko Gechev |
When Minko reached out to remind us of the Angular v16 launch, we decided we’d remind him that most JavaScript Weekly readers aren’t using Angular (sorry Minko!) but to ask if he’d like to make the case as to why JavaScript developers shouldn’t sleep on Angular in 2023. Here’s what he had to say: |
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