Those problems aren't 'solved'. The author has an implementation of a solution. It's one that they think is good, which is ace and I'm happy for him, but if he ever introduces a second developer to his project those 'solved' problems will become a point of friction. They'll go from 'solved' to 'solved, but in the wrong way' or 'solved, but not for this edge case', or 'solved, but why is the code so verbose?'
The massive advantage of a framework is that the people who choose it have agreed to share a solution to the common problems. This cannot be overstated - as soon as your team grows to more than one developer you move from 'solve the problem' to 'solve the problem in a way that people agree on', and that is far more complicated than just solving a problem. Sometimes you get lucky and work with people who think the same way as you, or with people who are willing to compromise on their ideal solution and accept yours, and then things still work, but if they're 'passionate' about being right then it's horrible, slow, and results in bad code.
A framework is an upfront agreement about how to build something. That has no practical advantage for a dev working alone. It's incredibly useful for two or more devs working together. Which framework doesn't really matter, except the ones with more devs behind them make it a lot easier to find people who've already accepted that way of working. That's helpful.
>if he ever introduces a second developer to his project those 'solved' problems will become a point of friction. They'll go from 'solved' to 'solved, but in the wrong way' or 'solved, but not for this edge case', or 'solved, but why is the code so verbose?'
I agree with the problems you list, but I don't think a framework solves them. The same complaints can be made by the second developer because the first developer chose the "wrong" framework. Solved the wrong way, not covering the edge cases of your domain, too verbose etc.
Additionally a framework will likely be bloated and inefficient because they try to solve every problem for everyone, and you introduce a random breaking point where any framework update could in theory break your system.
To write good React you have to follow conventions, too. You can't get away from conventions.
People keep touting react etc but I swear every mobile ordering app I use lags like hell, just from recent example, and these can easily be built and maintained without a huge framework to "manage state" or "connect state to the view".
People keep touting react etc but I swear every mobile ordering app I use lags like hell..
I don't doubt it. People make terrible websites with React.
However ... what might be happening is that you go to some websites, and some of them are great and others are terrible laggy garbage. When it's a bad one you open up devtools and see React, and that leads you to conclude that React is bad. But reality is that the good ones also use React, because most big websites use it.
Your reaction to the good ones is to assume they're well-built using whatever tech you happen to think is great (Rails, Vanilla JS, Vue, Svelte... whatever) but you're not actually looking. Hell, a great website isn't even a website, it's the experience of interacting with the business behind it. You don't even think about the tech when the website is actually usable.
Your reaction to the bad websites is to look under the hood, and you often find React.
That either means React websites are bad, or that React websites are good or bad, and it's not really React that's the issue. It's the team who built the site (and often not even the tech team; there's often some Product or commercial pressure that's driving the team to release something that's not really ready yet.)
I'm not sure I'd say "React Bad", I'd rather say "React Not Really Super Necessary and More Often Than Not Leads to a Worst Experience at Maybe a Slightly Lower Initial Cost" :)
I did an experiment recently, I actually wanted to launch a dashboard and picked React because I knew I could throw React + Tailwind + popular_component_and_charts_frameworks at Opus and get a decent result. But actually, I realized a lot of fairly simple button clicks had like a 100ms-200ms delay, and I just did not like it. I ported it to Java/Javalin with J2HTML and kept tailwind, and it's very snappy and works great. It's currently 96k lines of java ^_^
A lot of web development problems are solved. That's what this author and many other very experienced jaded principal engineers try to say year after year.
Because you think whatever you want to pretend your web software isn't MVC isn't solved doesn't mean it's true. Oh brother, MVVM, Model-template-view (no offense, Simon), come on.
You define resources on an HTML page, the browser loads them, renders a page, loads scripts, and makes AJAX calls.
You don't need build scripts for this. More over, these frameworks and build scripts DON'T SOLVE PROBLEMS. They move them. They want you to become a React developer. Not a software engineer who writes web software.
They don't solve routing, because you rewrite it every year. They don't solve bundling, because you change bundlers every year. They don't solve event handling, because they just move the chain of calls where you define the listener.
Labeling UI frameworks as artificial complexity is simply a sign of inexperience manifested as NIH syndrome.
The vanilla approach is fine for a personal or toy project, but it's an unmitigated disaster for a project with even a moderately complex UI.
Eventually, the vanilla project becomes its own bespoke UI framework with a bunch of poor design choices because all the complexity that was dismissed as "artificial" eventually gets patched in using a rube-goldberg-machine approach to architecture.
Not everyone is building complex UIs like google sheets. Most people are building static pages with a sprinkle of interactivity, or maybe form pages for doing CRUD.
It starts as simple crud, but then product introduces a business rule where some fields need to be hidden when another option is selected somewhere. O, but not when this checked, etc. Having a reactive framework when this happens is very much needed to keep all these effects working without a lot of vanilla JS.
This can be solved later, but is a lot harder when you have an entire application that needs to bee kept working, and almost trivial if you started with some reactivity built in.
A lot of rules like "some fields are hidden / shown based on other fields" come from restricting users to only expressing valid object states. E.g. I have a form where a user can pick a "notifier". They get a first dropdown select which is email or teams-message. Then based on that selection to get another which fills the details relative to that.
In that case, the backend will likely have a class instancr representing it, with the first field being a discriminator on the class and the remaining fields being the details. And regardless of what the frontend does, the backend will revalidate always because you can never trust data sent from a frontend.
All that to say, maybe the form could be server side rendered, with an adaptor to convert a class definition into an html form fragment, and either embedding the js "rules" into the html itself, or making it a web component for containered usage.
Doing it this way is a big deviation from the current status quo, but I've found it to work very well and cut out a whole range of bugs. Plus it makes me think about what is truly client side state (no chance of staleness) vs server state cached in client to avoid repeat server calls (could be stale, leads to bugs).
Your first thought might be to use React, but in prior eras we wrote a function updateFieldVisibility() and that worked fine. Straightforward code can be faster than using a state management framework to determine exactly which fields' visibility changed.
But it's harder to have component composition. Consider also lists and adding/removing items and so on, juggling all of it gets insanely complex and requires MVC or MVVM patterns like with backbone.js
But now we're back at "Not everyone is building complex UIs like google sheets". I agree with the underlying sentiment of this thread: overengineering is way more common than underengineering.
Eventually each crud form evolves into something more complex, the bar is set higher today, we expect pagination, filtering, search, inline editing, grids, instant validation, auto-save, push notifications, state sync, ... that's not a complex UI nowadays, it's expected. Not sure what a non-complex UI looks like.
And it wasn't composable, state was kept in the DOM. Even with higher level libs like backbone we didn't have a component-oriented way like now. Each component had to manually manage all of its child components.
As I said, any app with at least a "moderately complex UI". If your app is just a sequence of web forms and stays that way forever, then you're not the target audience of a UI framework anyway.
Or not. For simple to moderate requirements, plain HTML with a small templating helper is genuinely simpler than React.
React’s complexity isn’t just components — it’s effects, state‑management conventions, data‑loading patterns, and the surrounding build ecosystem. If your UI doesn’t need those abstractions, adopting them early is pure overhead.
For these kinds of projects, React usually carries a much larger total cost than vanilla HTML + JS.
The “vanilla becomes a bespoke framework” claim assumes the UI will inevitably grow until it needs framework‑level abstractions. Most UIs don’t. React front‑loads complexity even when the UI is small, while vanilla only adds what the actual requirements demand.
A few helpers aren’t “reinventing React” — they’re choosing a simpler design avoiding numerous unnecessary abstractions, and with lower costs & complexity for the moderate apps they're building. It's a very valid architectural choice.
I appreciate the sentiment, but can't agree fully. I used vanilla JS for many years before AngularJS even existed (and I also tried AngulasJS when it was the new thing).
Vue is just a huge convenience over raw JavaScript for large, complex view. Sure, I don't get to do direct DOM manipulation, but when I write C code I also don't get to pick which variable goes in which CPU register. I accept giving up control that ASM would give me, for all the improvements that C brings on top of it, even if C just compiles to ASM and is an abstraction on top of it.
Writing programs in C has simplified developer experience over Assembly. Issue with JS frameworks is that many find them complex, i.e. complexity has not been abstracted away (which should be goal of abstractions). Maybe DOM manipulation has, but many new complex ideas had to be introduced to achieve it.
But isn't that the right thing to do? Recognize the problems and introduce concepts to tackle them. C introduced pointers as a concept, one more thing to learn and reason about but frees you from using addresses directly. Relational models was discovered as a formal way of understanding and reasoning about data structures. Frontend components introduce a composable architecture with lifecycle hooks, reactivity etc. Those concepts were already there (e.g. with ad-hoc html templates, event listeners, clean up code) but now they are actually formalized and made explicit and developers actively think about them when doing frontend. So the abstraction is there, but I feel for some reason non-UI people assume UI is easy to code, but they never thought about the actual concepts involved. Even without frameworks, you need to consider composability, modularity, events, life cycle, state management, async behavior, etc. I'd rather have those built in and considered as part of the programming model, than to avoid it.
I fully agree with the author, and I have stayed on vanilla JS for decades now. I like the simplicity, ownership, zero dependecies. I have my own bundler in Spring Boot using Google Closure Compiler, which works autonomously with the javascript assets. No nodejs needed.
Also with the developer disruption of agentic coding AI, the arguments for using vanilla JS is even stronger. Code reviews of code/solutions is much easier. Scoping of code paths for each server-side render templates is easier. The AI does all the boilerplate coding, while keeping it readable and debugable. Implementing design patterns is just common computer science stuff, and the coding agent is pretty good at it.
I also what to mention, as a business owner, and boss of a startup. All developers here work with vanilla javascript. They were first surprised, but today they prefer it by a huge margin because of the simplicity and zero dependency and non existing build steps. The web browser is the framework, you need another abstraction over the web browser.
> The idea of reactivity came from or was popularized by Angular.js
No, spreadsheets popularized reactivity. And the general point is incredibly weak.
Don't use frameworks and make your own? Sure, have your fun. But then try teaching your framework to your company of 1000 and see how quickly you realize your view of the "problems" are only a slice of the pie.
Aside from the Giants maybe some consultancies or hire-firms have that many? But they use whatever the client uses. If you're not in the business of selling frontend development services then a big part of your competitive advantage is _being able_ to make technology choices that are more-optimal than the labor market's lowest-common-denominator slurry.
Between JS/ECMAscript being abandonware for a decade and CSS' historical immaturity (cross-browser layout, custom properties, more pseudoclasses, etc) the Web was more of a wild west "whatever you we can cobble together" place. So of course we built an entire toolchain ecosystem for all the cool new tools we would reinvent from scratch.
but Things Are Pretty Good these days. We even have the world's only fully system portable assembly language: WASM! And the browser's Web APIs are becoming something like the missing Standard Library (shoutout to Deno).
The author's point seems to be that we are past a tipping point where we need all that additional complexity. You don't _need_ a separate system of reactivity these days, you can write a (closer to pre-hooks React, even!) React-style component library with Web Components now.
Personally I would need for Type Annotations to be a fully supported part of the spec before I made the point to "use the platform" professionally. Until some market force causes the core web technologies to truly fork my skills are useful for life. It's like a pale shadow of how UNIX users must feel :')
My point was your needs and problems are not everyone's needs and problems.
I don't want to think of memory management in most projects, I want to focus on business logic, so I use Node.js instead of Rust, even if the latter gives me more control.
Similarly, I don't want to think of DOM management in most projects, I want to focus on data dependencies, so I use React instead of Web Components, even if the latter gives me more control.
This hit so close to home. For the last eight months I've been building a web app without any major framework like react or angular. Angular taught me a lot of important lessons about best practices for structuring UI. But eventually you run into boilerplate that doesn't jive with what you want to do.
The author frames this as artificial complexity, and that's the best framing I've seen. The browser has a particular presentation philosophy and the more you try to cover it up, the more awkward your code becomes at the edges.
The killer application of LLMs is their ability to inform and adapt to a particular API, and analyze the code that you write. They are garbage at producing functionality for which they don't have a thousand examples, but provide documentation and intent and they will help you fill in the gaps. This is the real 10x opportunity, and the best part is that you can still write all the code yourself.
I'm certain this doesn't just apply to javascript and the web. I predict that the need for frameworks will slowly go away.
VanillaJS ecmascript needs far more rapid development. Right now too often there are polyfills being suggested to avoid developing features into the browser. For example, react and vue and angular features should be standardized by now.
As for frameworks, we are not progressing towards AI-driven frameworks.
> Multi-page applications are slow to load and navigate.
A bit tired to see this...
No it's not. We do this all the time. It's as simple as using proper HTTP headers for your css/js/pictures/whatever. You can even have smooth page transitions now.
A browser can load a singular page within tens of milliseconds of receiving the packets. It literally cannot get faster. Single page applications only feel faster because there's no risk of white flashes.
Multi-page applications are slow if you load in 20 libraries from 10 different CDNs, a page tracking system, a click tracking system, a "performance metrics" system, a chat bot overlay, an advertising platform, all the crap loaded by the ad intermediate, all the crap loaded by the ad itself, an ad "traffic quality" montor, a Stripe.com thing (even though this isn't a payment page), something from Facebook, something else from fbcdn...
HTTP was designed for multi-page applications/websites but I think it makes sense that Facebook migrated from basic PHP/MySQL to something more complex including React and making less full-page navigation events, for performance reasons (server costs and mobile loading time). There's also UX because a PHP website can feel a bit static, with less animations.
But yes the web has evolved since then and the HTTP protocol has newer versions and most apps don't serve as many users as Facebook.
Did I misunderstand or was that whole rant just to establish that, actually, we do need super tiny frameworks for the front end, but they're super tiny so it's not a big deal and they're not bad like React?
We don't need things taking control from us. Or dictating the terms for manipulating an already defined interface.
If that means you have to make a small thing that is designed to do just the task at hand but to do it well, I am all for it.
I think the only frameworks that I have encountered that I felt were worth using were server side things like express where they had a very specific task to do and could isolate areas of behaviour.
My take is that the take that vanilla js is better because developers love coding more than they love building the thing. See all the frameworks/packages built as an example.
This person re-invented form handlers, frameworks, ui helpers just to be able to do some basic things.
Did anyone else notice the pattern that ever since the LLMs got popular the "I hate javascript" kind of posts or comments have decreased?
It could be attributed also to typescript dominance of course, since people don't use plain js anymore.
As for the blog post, I agree, I also implemented my own js framework when I code in vanilla js and it works fine.
The problem is not inventing frameworks, the problem is that everyone invents frameworks, so people all know different things and they are hard to hire.
I think the complaints attenuated in the last in the last 10-15 years because javascript itself became a much better language. Things really started to change with ES5. The introduction of let / const, modules, async, .?, template strings, etc. transformed it from an ugly kludge to a really capable language.
Of course, if you use old syntax you still deal with weird scoping and casting, but you don't have to any more.
Also, I think the framework churn has slowed considerably in the last 5 years.
And he ended up... creating frameworks himself. I fail to see the whole point of the article tbh. It's a rant against JS frameworks/libraries and the frontend in general all to end up admitting he did the same?
I love vanilla JavaScript. All my personal projects are plain JavaScript. No Typescript. But in a company setting, it's almost impossible to find plain JavaScript roles.
Plain JS is also a lot better with AI. I don't recall Claude ever making any mistakes in terms of getting the type wrong with plain JS since I started using it. It's just not the kind of mistake that AI makes.
I feel somewhat vindicated by this. I've been saying for years that coding isn't the hard part, type correctness isn't the hard part. I also made a point that complex interfaces are a greater danger and that Typescript tends to encourage people to design complex interfaces... And look, this certainly seems to be reflected in the training data because my AI token usage at work (Typescript) is far greater than on my side projects for the same task complexity.
This is kind of proving my point that plain JS code is better architeted overall than Typescript code... It makes sense to me, any complex plain JS code MUST be well architecture because JS is unforgiving. The spaghetti doesn't go very far in JS.
Vanilla JavaScript makes sense for personal projects, but if you're working on a team, I wouldn't trust other team members to not create their own frameworks that may not be as well documented.
Especially nowadays with LLMs, the team would benefit more from the LLM innately knowing a widely used library/framework than having to spend context each session teaching the agent your custom setup through context files and skills.
I use Svelte 5 (without SvelteKit) for my SPA's, after doing my first SPA in vanilla JS. Then I discovered Svelte. Svelte is very close to the platform and still solves a lot of problems: for reactivity, modularity and CSS cascading (and in version 5 it is not too "magical"). A lot of the critique of frameworks in this article does not apply to Svelte.
How so? Svelte provides a bunch of (very nice, no doubt) abstractions for building web UIs, and there's a build step. In that regard, Svelte is no different from other JS frameworks.
Honestly, I've always thought that whether frameworks or vanilla JavaScript are better is very context dependent. If you're working on a complex UI where keeping everything consistent and understandable without a framework would be hell (like Google Docs or Gmail), then a framework like React is preferable. If you're working with a simple website that needs minimum interactivity, then vanilla JavaScript is probably the better tool for the job.
The issue is that much of the time, people seem to choose tools based on convenience/past experience, not whether it's actually the right solution to their current issue.
I've been considering going back to vanilla javascript, given the current power of LLMs. It could become unreadable spaghetti, but it does that anyway with frameworks.
The power of web components is having the ability to develop complex front end without the need for a build tool in 2026. In 2008 when I got started with heavy javascript jquery was a must have tool to fill in for all the horrible browser api incompatibilites at the time. But because we are just developing custom elements with vanilla it works fine with vue and rust and all the others.
> develop complex front end without the need for a build tool
zero build on complex front ends is disrespectful to your users. when you dont minify and code split you are basically saying "got a slow connection? tough luck, go wait for 10 seconds while this page loads 1.5mb of code that could be 5x smaller but i dont care enough to spend a couple minutes on a basic vite setup."
you might get away with it when its a mostly static page with a couple lines of script but when its a bigger app users will notice. "just write less code" is not an option most of the time. and tsc is also a build tool so if you take it strictly you either get no type safety or get stuck with awful looking jsdoc comments that take up space in your final script file.
I write in vanilla TypeScript. I do not have any build step in my application. Since Node now supports native type stripping I don't have a compile step either. I just write my code and then point node at the main file, and this even includes front-end code for the browser.
Can you explain more about how the front end aspect works? I'm not clear how the front end code could by TypeScript without a build step, unless I'm misreading.
Some good history of the JS ecosystem here but the underlying message is all the same, frameworks scale and provide structure but you don't need them. Very easy to agree up to this point.
Author then elaborates in the absence of using a common-knowledge framework you can create some tighter solution that achieves just the part you need. This is "fun" programming, and the author is suitably impressed with themselves for solving problems they created just by convincing themself not to use a framework. Sometimes that's fine, although I don't think there's much appetite for this anymore.
Article doesn't really elaborate on what "scaling" and "providing structure" means, I think it downplays the benefits because when you use <framework> you are really establishing ground rules for how all future developers are going to work on that software. You don't know exactly what they'll write, but you know they'll always gravitate towards the top 2 or 3 solutions for that framework at any given time.
When you bust out a bespoke solution that carves out that one thing you needed and does it oh so elegantly and perfectly, you're creating art but most of the canvas is left blank for future developers and they're effectively going to scribble on it with crayons.
We practice engineering. As engineers, we need to understand the realities of each project we take on. Those realities are not limited to the marketing bullet points we might apply to the imagined product someday, which is what early career folk might naively call "the requirements".
Among the most critical realities to consider exist outside the product definition entirely, and have to do with the environment in which it will exist during and after development. These are things like plausible scaling curves and limits, code lifetime, team size, deployment options and preferences, etc. Others are things like available runway, team fluency and talent, available tools and licenses, etc.
One of the big eyeroll moments of the last 15 years or so was when folks started blindly cargo culting global-scale 10,000-engineer enterprise practices on projects that would obviously only ever be touched by 1-2 technicians and deployed on a far far far more modest scale. Instead of actively considering any of those environmental requirements above, "engineers" would try to treat every project as though it would someday service 10,000,000 DAU under the hand of dozens or hundreds of churning technicians.
Akin to the joke about some Americans who see themselves as "temporarily embarassed millionares", making foolish choices at their own obvious expense, many engineers during this era would seem to see themselves as "temporarily embarassed Facebooks".
In countless cases, this was simply very dumb and very wasteful and at best amounted to inadvertent (or perhaps intentional) resume-padding for the people involved, while their projects bloated and sagged and lurched under unwarranted complexity.
Sometimes (in fact: often), just doing the thing well with simple, clear, stable tools -- and nothing more -- is the right choice.
It is truly insane that this still continues to happen today, I mean the entire cloud industry is built on overcharging clients for compute they will never ever realistically use.
Not too mention how damaging it all is to environment in exacerbating the climate catastrophe.
Asking in good faith: how is your experience working with vanilla JS on a team?
While I’m not the biggest fan of Nextjs for my own solo projects, I really enjoy using it at work. Leaning into the opinionation it provides/encourages keeps my team from bickering too much about how to structure things.
It’s really nice to say “this is the idiomatic way of doing it according to the docs” and for everyone to nod their head. Whereas pages in our legacy PHP codebase look completely different depending on who implemented them.
I have to admit that I really love web components ever since Polymer 1, and agree with the article sentiment (this post was starting to get to be a mirror of many of the authors thoughts, so cut it down)
It is very interesting watching the Web cycles, and found it curious how many people here were sad that typescript was not mentioned. There are some fun (though I suppose dangerous) things you can do without it, and I've found it has had very many instances not helped me where expected like a fully matured typed language has. And I've worked with a lot of people who just went I added types and don't know how to use generics.
I guess if you have it poorly implemented, then it's best to leave as JavaScript. And, web components you can keep things very simple... Which helps keep many errors down.
React is an electric screwdriver. Real hassle: battery needs charging, need to insert correct bit, may need extendy bit for some jobs. But got an IKEA cupboard and not a simple shelf? Gimme that electric screwdriver!
In vanilla JS even small SPA projects can end up tangled or you are hand compiling what React would do for you for free.
Nit: in React events are events useEffect reacts to abstract state changes.
Author's EHTML "framework" reminds me of HTMX. https://e-html.org/html/vs-others.html misses comparison with HTMX. Curious on the similarities and differences.
Well, you could use jsDoc to hold your types instead of writing them in typescript. The typescript compiler can still check types in jsDoc comments but you do not need a build step and the javascript you ship to the browser would be the same you write in your editor.
JSDoc is not as powerful as TypeScript types but that might be fine for your use case. However, if you are already using tsc I don't see why you'd care about a build step, and if you care that the JS in the browser is the same as the editor, tsc can do that too without minifying and changing the JS output, merely stripping the types instead.
As a user I don't really appreciate sites that do this as they tend to have worse latency for UI interactions and less pleasant page transitions. And of course, they are unusable offline
> As for offline, yeah, my Internet web page doesn't work offline.
That's really too bad honestly. What about your users who want to use your site when they're offline? Sympathy with those users is why I made sure that my site works well when offline.
Any framework that requires me to learn custom syntax, is a problem in my opinion. I agree with the author that the browser is already the framework, and a powerful one at that. I don't really struggle with views and dom thanks to my own libraries, so maybe those without appreciate thw guilded gardens of these frameworks. Problem is that if these frameworks fall out of favour or stray from their original quality, you're stuck with worthless knowledge and maybe code as well
This article misses the point of frameworks like Angular. Its never been about whether a framework is qualitatively better that vanilla or some other framework. The issue is when your codebase and your team reach a certain size you need the baseline, predictability and the guard rails that a framework provides. Otherwise you risk your project spiraling into chaos.
All projects spiral into chaos unless there's a person or more who try to reduce the growth of entropy, all the time, framework or not.
And these days, LLM agent will just re-use existing patterns if prompted correctly, regardless of who in the team is using it or whether or not there's a public well known framework in place or not. So consistency should not really be an issue anymore even in a team.
Even better: vanilla TypeScript + golang middleware (esbuild) on the backend that converts to JS on the fly. Like vanilla JS but with all the benefits of a type system and no bundler or npm required.
The whole thing boils down to creating objects (the constructor is built-in) and using functions on objects. Functions are objects, too. In fact, everything except primitive values are objects.
IMHO knowledge of C++, Python, or pretty much everything that's not a lisp variant, doesn't translate well to JavaScript.
There's such a nice language with its own silly warts, readily available to pretty much anyone with a computer regardless of form factor, being misunderstood by the vast majority of programmers.
Nobody says that React is great (also) because it's industry standard. If you pick up a React codebase you instantly understand how a component renders, where its state is, what its effects are, which components render that component etc. If it's React with a decent linter configuration, it's even easier. With a custom framework, on the other hand, you're at the mercy of who invented it. You have to find where state is, you have to trace where the state is "teleported" via broadcast, you have to understand where side effects are invoked etc. If the custom framework is as good as React, I'd still choose React just because it's a de factor standard.
I think OP is mainly right about this, but the tone of the article is going to annoy people very much. I believe many of us have done both the self-serving homemade framework and the industry standard framework. And many of us know the pros and cons of both approaches.
I don’t like react very much and dislike the other ones even more. Yet, it’d be stupid to say you can’t make them work. They come with a large community and pckages and solve a ton of problems that a homebrewed framework doesn’t even conceive of. And you can just start writing the stuff you need right away.
On the other hand, a homemade framework doesn’t require the extra overhead of knowing the framework, and maintaining it overtime. You don’t need to track down why the code gets run a gazillion times more than it needs to, you can debug through your events, etc.
They’re just different ways of doing things.
But mainly: react is a pain in the butt but if time is your constrain, it should get you to where you want to be faster than if you’re not using it.
I like this article because it feels so pre-AI. This is what people were arguing about on HackerNews back in the day! How so very nostalgic it makes me feel.
But in response to the article: no, vanilla JS is a nightmare to keep your code organized, and battle tested frameworks do quite a good job at that. It's otherwise mostly a waste of time, or an intellectual exercise at most, to build an app with vanilla JS
I know posts like this get a lot of whinging, but you are 100% right. The browser is in itself a platform; frameworks are not like some kind of hyper abstracted Web Scrinting Language for people too important to deal with "raw" CSS/DOM. They're a an awkward, alternate abstraction, slow as molasses, and they leak like a sieve.
So many more problems solved…
Those problems aren't 'solved'. The author has an implementation of a solution. It's one that they think is good, which is ace and I'm happy for him, but if he ever introduces a second developer to his project those 'solved' problems will become a point of friction. They'll go from 'solved' to 'solved, but in the wrong way' or 'solved, but not for this edge case', or 'solved, but why is the code so verbose?'
The massive advantage of a framework is that the people who choose it have agreed to share a solution to the common problems. This cannot be overstated - as soon as your team grows to more than one developer you move from 'solve the problem' to 'solve the problem in a way that people agree on', and that is far more complicated than just solving a problem. Sometimes you get lucky and work with people who think the same way as you, or with people who are willing to compromise on their ideal solution and accept yours, and then things still work, but if they're 'passionate' about being right then it's horrible, slow, and results in bad code.
A framework is an upfront agreement about how to build something. That has no practical advantage for a dev working alone. It's incredibly useful for two or more devs working together. Which framework doesn't really matter, except the ones with more devs behind them make it a lot easier to find people who've already accepted that way of working. That's helpful.
>if he ever introduces a second developer to his project those 'solved' problems will become a point of friction. They'll go from 'solved' to 'solved, but in the wrong way' or 'solved, but not for this edge case', or 'solved, but why is the code so verbose?'
I agree with the problems you list, but I don't think a framework solves them. The same complaints can be made by the second developer because the first developer chose the "wrong" framework. Solved the wrong way, not covering the edge cases of your domain, too verbose etc.
Additionally a framework will likely be bloated and inefficient because they try to solve every problem for everyone, and you introduce a random breaking point where any framework update could in theory break your system.
you just agree on a set of conventions for components and state management, it's not that hard. This is basically how Rails works...
yes it's still a framework, duh. it's just less abstraction than react etc.
Sure, and if you like working with the conventions and abstraction Rails offers that's great.
Other people make different choices. That doesn't mean they're wrong.
To write good React you have to follow conventions, too. You can't get away from conventions.
People keep touting react etc but I swear every mobile ordering app I use lags like hell, just from recent example, and these can easily be built and maintained without a huge framework to "manage state" or "connect state to the view".
People keep touting react etc but I swear every mobile ordering app I use lags like hell..
I don't doubt it. People make terrible websites with React.
However ... what might be happening is that you go to some websites, and some of them are great and others are terrible laggy garbage. When it's a bad one you open up devtools and see React, and that leads you to conclude that React is bad. But reality is that the good ones also use React, because most big websites use it.
Your reaction to the good ones is to assume they're well-built using whatever tech you happen to think is great (Rails, Vanilla JS, Vue, Svelte... whatever) but you're not actually looking. Hell, a great website isn't even a website, it's the experience of interacting with the business behind it. You don't even think about the tech when the website is actually usable.
Your reaction to the bad websites is to look under the hood, and you often find React.
That either means React websites are bad, or that React websites are good or bad, and it's not really React that's the issue. It's the team who built the site (and often not even the tech team; there's often some Product or commercial pressure that's driving the team to release something that's not really ready yet.)
I've had someone tell me to not bother with list virtualization under React, since the 'computer's fast, it won't matter'.
We shipped it like that. Turns out the computer's not fast and it does matter.
I'm not sure I'd say "React Bad", I'd rather say "React Not Really Super Necessary and More Often Than Not Leads to a Worst Experience at Maybe a Slightly Lower Initial Cost" :)
I did an experiment recently, I actually wanted to launch a dashboard and picked React because I knew I could throw React + Tailwind + popular_component_and_charts_frameworks at Opus and get a decent result. But actually, I realized a lot of fairly simple button clicks had like a 100ms-200ms delay, and I just did not like it. I ported it to Java/Javalin with J2HTML and kept tailwind, and it's very snappy and works great. It's currently 96k lines of java ^_^
So React is like C++?
Absolutely agree. I hate the state management mess in these frameworks.
A lot of web development problems are solved. That's what this author and many other very experienced jaded principal engineers try to say year after year.
Because you think whatever you want to pretend your web software isn't MVC isn't solved doesn't mean it's true. Oh brother, MVVM, Model-template-view (no offense, Simon), come on.
You define resources on an HTML page, the browser loads them, renders a page, loads scripts, and makes AJAX calls.
You don't need build scripts for this. More over, these frameworks and build scripts DON'T SOLVE PROBLEMS. They move them. They want you to become a React developer. Not a software engineer who writes web software.
They don't solve routing, because you rewrite it every year. They don't solve bundling, because you change bundlers every year. They don't solve event handling, because they just move the chain of calls where you define the listener.
It's all a lie.
Labeling UI frameworks as artificial complexity is simply a sign of inexperience manifested as NIH syndrome.
The vanilla approach is fine for a personal or toy project, but it's an unmitigated disaster for a project with even a moderately complex UI.
Eventually, the vanilla project becomes its own bespoke UI framework with a bunch of poor design choices because all the complexity that was dismissed as "artificial" eventually gets patched in using a rube-goldberg-machine approach to architecture.
Not everyone is building complex UIs like google sheets. Most people are building static pages with a sprinkle of interactivity, or maybe form pages for doing CRUD.
It starts as simple crud, but then product introduces a business rule where some fields need to be hidden when another option is selected somewhere. O, but not when this checked, etc. Having a reactive framework when this happens is very much needed to keep all these effects working without a lot of vanilla JS.
This can be solved later, but is a lot harder when you have an entire application that needs to bee kept working, and almost trivial if you started with some reactivity built in.
A lot of rules like "some fields are hidden / shown based on other fields" come from restricting users to only expressing valid object states. E.g. I have a form where a user can pick a "notifier". They get a first dropdown select which is email or teams-message. Then based on that selection to get another which fills the details relative to that.
In that case, the backend will likely have a class instancr representing it, with the first field being a discriminator on the class and the remaining fields being the details. And regardless of what the frontend does, the backend will revalidate always because you can never trust data sent from a frontend.
All that to say, maybe the form could be server side rendered, with an adaptor to convert a class definition into an html form fragment, and either embedding the js "rules" into the html itself, or making it a web component for containered usage.
Doing it this way is a big deviation from the current status quo, but I've found it to work very well and cut out a whole range of bugs. Plus it makes me think about what is truly client side state (no chance of staleness) vs server state cached in client to avoid repeat server calls (could be stale, leads to bugs).
Your first thought might be to use React, but in prior eras we wrote a function updateFieldVisibility() and that worked fine. Straightforward code can be faster than using a state management framework to determine exactly which fields' visibility changed.
But it's harder to have component composition. Consider also lists and adding/removing items and so on, juggling all of it gets insanely complex and requires MVC or MVVM patterns like with backbone.js
But now we're back at "Not everyone is building complex UIs like google sheets". I agree with the underlying sentiment of this thread: overengineering is way more common than underengineering.
Eventually each crud form evolves into something more complex, the bar is set higher today, we expect pagination, filtering, search, inline editing, grids, instant validation, auto-save, push notifications, state sync, ... that's not a complex UI nowadays, it's expected. Not sure what a non-complex UI looks like.
it can be faster, but is it correct?
React was invented because jQuery style state management collapsed into unmanageable code past a certain size
And it wasn't composable, state was kept in the DOM. Even with higher level libs like backbone we didn't have a component-oriented way like now. Each component had to manually manage all of its child components.
As I said, any app with at least a "moderately complex UI". If your app is just a sequence of web forms and stays that way forever, then you're not the target audience of a UI framework anyway.
Regarding puzzling design choices, I am wondering at the preponderance of data attributes like
For custom web components, maybe the author forgot that you don't need to prefix attributes with data ?You don't need it anywhere, unless you want to use dataset property.
Or not. For simple to moderate requirements, plain HTML with a small templating helper is genuinely simpler than React.
React’s complexity isn’t just components — it’s effects, state‑management conventions, data‑loading patterns, and the surrounding build ecosystem. If your UI doesn’t need those abstractions, adopting them early is pure overhead.
For these kinds of projects, React usually carries a much larger total cost than vanilla HTML + JS.
The “vanilla becomes a bespoke framework” claim assumes the UI will inevitably grow until it needs framework‑level abstractions. Most UIs don’t. React front‑loads complexity even when the UI is small, while vanilla only adds what the actual requirements demand.
A few helpers aren’t “reinventing React” — they’re choosing a simpler design avoiding numerous unnecessary abstractions, and with lower costs & complexity for the moderate apps they're building. It's a very valid architectural choice.
I appreciate the sentiment, but can't agree fully. I used vanilla JS for many years before AngularJS even existed (and I also tried AngulasJS when it was the new thing).
Vue is just a huge convenience over raw JavaScript for large, complex view. Sure, I don't get to do direct DOM manipulation, but when I write C code I also don't get to pick which variable goes in which CPU register. I accept giving up control that ASM would give me, for all the improvements that C brings on top of it, even if C just compiles to ASM and is an abstraction on top of it.
Writing programs in C has simplified developer experience over Assembly. Issue with JS frameworks is that many find them complex, i.e. complexity has not been abstracted away (which should be goal of abstractions). Maybe DOM manipulation has, but many new complex ideas had to be introduced to achieve it.
But isn't that the right thing to do? Recognize the problems and introduce concepts to tackle them. C introduced pointers as a concept, one more thing to learn and reason about but frees you from using addresses directly. Relational models was discovered as a formal way of understanding and reasoning about data structures. Frontend components introduce a composable architecture with lifecycle hooks, reactivity etc. Those concepts were already there (e.g. with ad-hoc html templates, event listeners, clean up code) but now they are actually formalized and made explicit and developers actively think about them when doing frontend. So the abstraction is there, but I feel for some reason non-UI people assume UI is easy to code, but they never thought about the actual concepts involved. Even without frameworks, you need to consider composability, modularity, events, life cycle, state management, async behavior, etc. I'd rather have those built in and considered as part of the programming model, than to avoid it.
Is it mainly the reactivity part of Vue that you benefit from, or are there other aspects which are important?
I fully agree with the author, and I have stayed on vanilla JS for decades now. I like the simplicity, ownership, zero dependecies. I have my own bundler in Spring Boot using Google Closure Compiler, which works autonomously with the javascript assets. No nodejs needed.
Also with the developer disruption of agentic coding AI, the arguments for using vanilla JS is even stronger. Code reviews of code/solutions is much easier. Scoping of code paths for each server-side render templates is easier. The AI does all the boilerplate coding, while keeping it readable and debugable. Implementing design patterns is just common computer science stuff, and the coding agent is pretty good at it.
I also what to mention, as a business owner, and boss of a startup. All developers here work with vanilla javascript. They were first surprised, but today they prefer it by a huge margin because of the simplicity and zero dependency and non existing build steps. The web browser is the framework, you need another abstraction over the web browser.
> The idea of reactivity came from or was popularized by Angular.js
No, spreadsheets popularized reactivity. And the general point is incredibly weak.
Don't use frameworks and make your own? Sure, have your fun. But then try teaching your framework to your company of 1000 and see how quickly you realize your view of the "problems" are only a slice of the pie.
How many companies have 1000 frontend developers?
Do they need 1000 frontend developers?
Aside from the Giants maybe some consultancies or hire-firms have that many? But they use whatever the client uses. If you're not in the business of selling frontend development services then a big part of your competitive advantage is _being able_ to make technology choices that are more-optimal than the labor market's lowest-common-denominator slurry.
Between JS/ECMAscript being abandonware for a decade and CSS' historical immaturity (cross-browser layout, custom properties, more pseudoclasses, etc) the Web was more of a wild west "whatever you we can cobble together" place. So of course we built an entire toolchain ecosystem for all the cool new tools we would reinvent from scratch.
but Things Are Pretty Good these days. We even have the world's only fully system portable assembly language: WASM! And the browser's Web APIs are becoming something like the missing Standard Library (shoutout to Deno).
The author's point seems to be that we are past a tipping point where we need all that additional complexity. You don't _need_ a separate system of reactivity these days, you can write a (closer to pre-hooks React, even!) React-style component library with Web Components now.
Personally I would need for Type Annotations to be a fully supported part of the spec before I made the point to "use the platform" professionally. Until some market force causes the core web technologies to truly fork my skills are useful for life. It's like a pale shadow of how UNIX users must feel :')
My point was your needs and problems are not everyone's needs and problems.
I don't want to think of memory management in most projects, I want to focus on business logic, so I use Node.js instead of Rust, even if the latter gives me more control.
Similarly, I don't want to think of DOM management in most projects, I want to focus on data dependencies, so I use React instead of Web Components, even if the latter gives me more control.
This hit so close to home. For the last eight months I've been building a web app without any major framework like react or angular. Angular taught me a lot of important lessons about best practices for structuring UI. But eventually you run into boilerplate that doesn't jive with what you want to do.
The author frames this as artificial complexity, and that's the best framing I've seen. The browser has a particular presentation philosophy and the more you try to cover it up, the more awkward your code becomes at the edges.
The killer application of LLMs is their ability to inform and adapt to a particular API, and analyze the code that you write. They are garbage at producing functionality for which they don't have a thousand examples, but provide documentation and intent and they will help you fill in the gaps. This is the real 10x opportunity, and the best part is that you can still write all the code yourself.
I'm certain this doesn't just apply to javascript and the web. I predict that the need for frameworks will slowly go away.
LLMs are non-deterministic and can benefit from guardrails which frameworks happily provide.
If you are relying on a LLM to write the code, sure. But no amount of guardrails can maintain the quality of a primarily LLM generated codebase.
Claude 4.6+ seem to work fine with my React/typescript apps.
VanillaJS ecmascript needs far more rapid development. Right now too often there are polyfills being suggested to avoid developing features into the browser. For example, react and vue and angular features should be standardized by now.
As for frameworks, we are not progressing towards AI-driven frameworks.
> Multi-page applications are slow to load and navigate.
A bit tired to see this...
No it's not. We do this all the time. It's as simple as using proper HTTP headers for your css/js/pictures/whatever. You can even have smooth page transitions now.
A browser can load a singular page within tens of milliseconds of receiving the packets. It literally cannot get faster. Single page applications only feel faster because there's no risk of white flashes.
Multi-page applications are slow if you load in 20 libraries from 10 different CDNs, a page tracking system, a click tracking system, a "performance metrics" system, a chat bot overlay, an advertising platform, all the crap loaded by the ad intermediate, all the crap loaded by the ad itself, an ad "traffic quality" montor, a Stripe.com thing (even though this isn't a payment page), something from Facebook, something else from fbcdn...
HTTP was designed for multi-page applications/websites but I think it makes sense that Facebook migrated from basic PHP/MySQL to something more complex including React and making less full-page navigation events, for performance reasons (server costs and mobile loading time). There's also UX because a PHP website can feel a bit static, with less animations.
But yes the web has evolved since then and the HTTP protocol has newer versions and most apps don't serve as many users as Facebook.
Did I misunderstand or was that whole rant just to establish that, actually, we do need super tiny frameworks for the front end, but they're super tiny so it's not a big deal and they're not bad like React?
We don't need things taking control from us. Or dictating the terms for manipulating an already defined interface.
If that means you have to make a small thing that is designed to do just the task at hand but to do it well, I am all for it.
I think the only frameworks that I have encountered that I felt were worth using were server side things like express where they had a very specific task to do and could isolate areas of behaviour.
My take is that the take that vanilla js is better because developers love coding more than they love building the thing. See all the frameworks/packages built as an example.
This person re-invented form handlers, frameworks, ui helpers just to be able to do some basic things.
All power to you if you like it, its just funny.
Did anyone else notice the pattern that ever since the LLMs got popular the "I hate javascript" kind of posts or comments have decreased?
It could be attributed also to typescript dominance of course, since people don't use plain js anymore.
As for the blog post, I agree, I also implemented my own js framework when I code in vanilla js and it works fine.
The problem is not inventing frameworks, the problem is that everyone invents frameworks, so people all know different things and they are hard to hire.
I think the complaints attenuated in the last in the last 10-15 years because javascript itself became a much better language. Things really started to change with ES5. The introduction of let / const, modules, async, .?, template strings, etc. transformed it from an ugly kludge to a really capable language.
Of course, if you use old syntax you still deal with weird scoping and casting, but you don't have to any more.
Also, I think the framework churn has slowed considerably in the last 5 years.
There "demo here" url is broken, it's resolving as:
https://cdn.guseyn.com(/mp4/desktop.mp4)
Instead of
https://cdn.guseyn.com/mp4/desktop.mp4
> NO, YOU CANNOT JUST USE GLOBAL STATE. USE THIRD-PARTY LIBRARY WITH FANCY FUNCTIONAL DESIGN.
window.i = 0; // initialize all my for loops in one go!
It’s been a minute since someone ranted about frontend frameworks. Take a shot.
And he ended up... creating frameworks himself. I fail to see the whole point of the article tbh. It's a rant against JS frameworks/libraries and the frontend in general all to end up admitting he did the same?
I checked out before getting to that. He even wrote his own HTML variant called EHTML.
https://e-html.org
Well played. You got me to visit your version of the thing you complained about. :clapping-emoji:
It's not a html variant. It's just a bunch of web components. Takes like 30s of looking at actual source code to figure that out.
I love vanilla JavaScript. All my personal projects are plain JavaScript. No Typescript. But in a company setting, it's almost impossible to find plain JavaScript roles.
Plain JS is also a lot better with AI. I don't recall Claude ever making any mistakes in terms of getting the type wrong with plain JS since I started using it. It's just not the kind of mistake that AI makes.
I feel somewhat vindicated by this. I've been saying for years that coding isn't the hard part, type correctness isn't the hard part. I also made a point that complex interfaces are a greater danger and that Typescript tends to encourage people to design complex interfaces... And look, this certainly seems to be reflected in the training data because my AI token usage at work (Typescript) is far greater than on my side projects for the same task complexity.
This is kind of proving my point that plain JS code is better architeted overall than Typescript code... It makes sense to me, any complex plain JS code MUST be well architecture because JS is unforgiving. The spaghetti doesn't go very far in JS.
Same, but the article isn't about JS vs TS, it's a criticism of frameworks.
Vanilla JavaScript makes sense for personal projects, but if you're working on a team, I wouldn't trust other team members to not create their own frameworks that may not be as well documented.
Especially nowadays with LLMs, the team would benefit more from the LLM innately knowing a widely used library/framework than having to spend context each session teaching the agent your custom setup through context files and skills.
Sure, when I wrote JavaScript for a living I wouldn't trust my employer to get hiring or training right either.
I use Svelte 5 (without SvelteKit) for my SPA's, after doing my first SPA in vanilla JS. Then I discovered Svelte. Svelte is very close to the platform and still solves a lot of problems: for reactivity, modularity and CSS cascading (and in version 5 it is not too "magical"). A lot of the critique of frameworks in this article does not apply to Svelte.
How so? Svelte provides a bunch of (very nice, no doubt) abstractions for building web UIs, and there's a build step. In that regard, Svelte is no different from other JS frameworks.
The hint how Svelte is different is in the word "different".
Honestly, I've always thought that whether frameworks or vanilla JavaScript are better is very context dependent. If you're working on a complex UI where keeping everything consistent and understandable without a framework would be hell (like Google Docs or Gmail), then a framework like React is preferable. If you're working with a simple website that needs minimum interactivity, then vanilla JavaScript is probably the better tool for the job.
The issue is that much of the time, people seem to choose tools based on convenience/past experience, not whether it's actually the right solution to their current issue.
I've been considering going back to vanilla javascript, given the current power of LLMs. It could become unreadable spaghetti, but it does that anyway with frameworks.
The power of web components is having the ability to develop complex front end without the need for a build tool in 2026. In 2008 when I got started with heavy javascript jquery was a must have tool to fill in for all the horrible browser api incompatibilites at the time. But because we are just developing custom elements with vanilla it works fine with vue and rust and all the others.
> develop complex front end without the need for a build tool
zero build on complex front ends is disrespectful to your users. when you dont minify and code split you are basically saying "got a slow connection? tough luck, go wait for 10 seconds while this page loads 1.5mb of code that could be 5x smaller but i dont care enough to spend a couple minutes on a basic vite setup."
you might get away with it when its a mostly static page with a couple lines of script but when its a bigger app users will notice. "just write less code" is not an option most of the time. and tsc is also a build tool so if you take it strictly you either get no type safety or get stuck with awful looking jsdoc comments that take up space in your final script file.
I write in vanilla TypeScript. I do not have any build step in my application. Since Node now supports native type stripping I don't have a compile step either. I just write my code and then point node at the main file, and this even includes front-end code for the browser.
Can you explain more about how the front end aspect works? I'm not clear how the front end code could by TypeScript without a build step, unless I'm misreading.
Node strips types on all imported code regardless of where that code executes.
Node doesn't run in the browser.
Presumably Node is the server (back end), and when the browser requests a TS file, Node is stripping the types before serving it to the browser.
That presumption is wrong, and doesn't quite make sense if you think about it.
I am aware and it’s not what I said.
Some good history of the JS ecosystem here but the underlying message is all the same, frameworks scale and provide structure but you don't need them. Very easy to agree up to this point.
Author then elaborates in the absence of using a common-knowledge framework you can create some tighter solution that achieves just the part you need. This is "fun" programming, and the author is suitably impressed with themselves for solving problems they created just by convincing themself not to use a framework. Sometimes that's fine, although I don't think there's much appetite for this anymore.
Article doesn't really elaborate on what "scaling" and "providing structure" means, I think it downplays the benefits because when you use <framework> you are really establishing ground rules for how all future developers are going to work on that software. You don't know exactly what they'll write, but you know they'll always gravitate towards the top 2 or 3 solutions for that framework at any given time.
When you bust out a bespoke solution that carves out that one thing you needed and does it oh so elegantly and perfectly, you're creating art but most of the canvas is left blank for future developers and they're effectively going to scribble on it with crayons.
You can say that without being demeaning. These are random people acting in good faith.
Also - sometimes it is actually useful to make a mini-thing instead of bringing in enterprise messes.
These people are perfectly fine with depicting React developers as corporate zombies that can't think for themselves. Good faith is bidirectional.
We practice engineering. As engineers, we need to understand the realities of each project we take on. Those realities are not limited to the marketing bullet points we might apply to the imagined product someday, which is what early career folk might naively call "the requirements".
Among the most critical realities to consider exist outside the product definition entirely, and have to do with the environment in which it will exist during and after development. These are things like plausible scaling curves and limits, code lifetime, team size, deployment options and preferences, etc. Others are things like available runway, team fluency and talent, available tools and licenses, etc.
One of the big eyeroll moments of the last 15 years or so was when folks started blindly cargo culting global-scale 10,000-engineer enterprise practices on projects that would obviously only ever be touched by 1-2 technicians and deployed on a far far far more modest scale. Instead of actively considering any of those environmental requirements above, "engineers" would try to treat every project as though it would someday service 10,000,000 DAU under the hand of dozens or hundreds of churning technicians.
Akin to the joke about some Americans who see themselves as "temporarily embarassed millionares", making foolish choices at their own obvious expense, many engineers during this era would seem to see themselves as "temporarily embarassed Facebooks".
In countless cases, this was simply very dumb and very wasteful and at best amounted to inadvertent (or perhaps intentional) resume-padding for the people involved, while their projects bloated and sagged and lurched under unwarranted complexity.
Sometimes (in fact: often), just doing the thing well with simple, clear, stable tools -- and nothing more -- is the right choice.
It is truly insane that this still continues to happen today, I mean the entire cloud industry is built on overcharging clients for compute they will never ever realistically use.
Not too mention how damaging it all is to environment in exacerbating the climate catastrophe.
>"frameworks scale and provide structure"
Web Components and vanilla JS scale just as well. Been doing this for ages.
Asking in good faith: how is your experience working with vanilla JS on a team?
While I’m not the biggest fan of Nextjs for my own solo projects, I really enjoy using it at work. Leaning into the opinionation it provides/encourages keeps my team from bickering too much about how to structure things.
It’s really nice to say “this is the idiomatic way of doing it according to the docs” and for everyone to nod their head. Whereas pages in our legacy PHP codebase look completely different depending on who implemented them.
I have to admit that I really love web components ever since Polymer 1, and agree with the article sentiment (this post was starting to get to be a mirror of many of the authors thoughts, so cut it down)
It is very interesting watching the Web cycles, and found it curious how many people here were sad that typescript was not mentioned. There are some fun (though I suppose dangerous) things you can do without it, and I've found it has had very many instances not helped me where expected like a fully matured typed language has. And I've worked with a lot of people who just went I added types and don't know how to use generics.
I guess if you have it poorly implemented, then it's best to leave as JavaScript. And, web components you can keep things very simple... Which helps keep many errors down.
Regarding Vanilla JS,
You don't need React: creating a minimal UI library:
https://pedroth.github.io/?p=post/NoNeedReact
No thank you.
React is an electric screwdriver. Real hassle: battery needs charging, need to insert correct bit, may need extendy bit for some jobs. But got an IKEA cupboard and not a simple shelf? Gimme that electric screwdriver!
In vanilla JS even small SPA projects can end up tangled or you are hand compiling what React would do for you for free.
Nit: in React events are events useEffect reacts to abstract state changes.
Author's EHTML "framework" reminds me of HTMX. https://e-html.org/html/vs-others.html misses comparison with HTMX. Curious on the similarities and differences.
I wish there was some sort of "use strict-typed" or something that let you use in-browser interpreted typescript
Well, you could use jsDoc to hold your types instead of writing them in typescript. The typescript compiler can still check types in jsDoc comments but you do not need a build step and the javascript you ship to the browser would be the same you write in your editor.
JSDoc is not as powerful as TypeScript types but that might be fine for your use case. However, if you are already using tsc I don't see why you'd care about a build step, and if you care that the JS in the browser is the same as the editor, tsc can do that too without minifying and changing the JS output, merely stripping the types instead.
I built some modules with jsDoc because I didn't want to have a build step but wanted type support.
Works fine.
It works really really well. No one should be writing untyped JS anymore.
"use stricter";
If we are going to rant like this… i’d say even most of JS is unnecessary.
Just use server side template rendering with HTMX. LLM can see server side request flow better anyway.
As a user I don't really appreciate sites that do this as they tend to have worse latency for UI interactions and less pleasant page transitions. And of course, they are unusable offline
My sites with htmx have less latency for ui interactions and page transitions work like every page on the internet.
As for offline, yeah, my Internet web page doesn't work offline. Shocker.
> As for offline, yeah, my Internet web page doesn't work offline.
That's really too bad honestly. What about your users who want to use your site when they're offline? Sympathy with those users is why I made sure that my site works well when offline.
i think nowadays is more important than ever to understand why/how/when to use one technology vs another.
ask Codex to make you a website and maybe it will use React.
maybe you didn't need really need build steps, but whatever it works?
Aka. I didn't like the N frameworks out there, so I invented 2 more. Now we have N+2...
Any framework that requires me to learn custom syntax, is a problem in my opinion. I agree with the author that the browser is already the framework, and a powerful one at that. I don't really struggle with views and dom thanks to my own libraries, so maybe those without appreciate thw guilded gardens of these frameworks. Problem is that if these frameworks fall out of favour or stray from their original quality, you're stuck with worthless knowledge and maybe code as well
This article misses the point of frameworks like Angular. Its never been about whether a framework is qualitatively better that vanilla or some other framework. The issue is when your codebase and your team reach a certain size you need the baseline, predictability and the guard rails that a framework provides. Otherwise you risk your project spiraling into chaos.
All projects spiral into chaos unless there's a person or more who try to reduce the growth of entropy, all the time, framework or not.
And these days, LLM agent will just re-use existing patterns if prompted correctly, regardless of who in the team is using it or whether or not there's a public well known framework in place or not. So consistency should not really be an issue anymore even in a team.
Even better: vanilla TypeScript + golang middleware (esbuild) on the backend that converts to JS on the fly. Like vanilla JS but with all the benefits of a type system and no bundler or npm required.
You still need a build tool, and that tool is likely broken if you need to return to the project in a year or two.
TypeScript benefits can be had without a build step by leveraging JsDoc.
What’s the Idiomatic Vanilla JavaScript way to bind data and UI in a web browser?
The whole thing boils down to creating objects (the constructor is built-in) and using functions on objects. Functions are objects, too. In fact, everything except primitive values are objects.
IMHO knowledge of C++, Python, or pretty much everything that's not a lisp variant, doesn't translate well to JavaScript.
There's such a nice language with its own silly warts, readily available to pretty much anyone with a computer regardless of form factor, being misunderstood by the vast majority of programmers.
Web components, invoker commands API, etc.
What are you really asking? You use data to populate content or inform your logic.
With webcomponent each tag is a component instance that can hold data and there are hooks for attributes change
Nobody says that React is great (also) because it's industry standard. If you pick up a React codebase you instantly understand how a component renders, where its state is, what its effects are, which components render that component etc. If it's React with a decent linter configuration, it's even easier. With a custom framework, on the other hand, you're at the mercy of who invented it. You have to find where state is, you have to trace where the state is "teleported" via broadcast, you have to understand where side effects are invoked etc. If the custom framework is as good as React, I'd still choose React just because it's a de factor standard.
I think OP is mainly right about this, but the tone of the article is going to annoy people very much. I believe many of us have done both the self-serving homemade framework and the industry standard framework. And many of us know the pros and cons of both approaches.
I don’t like react very much and dislike the other ones even more. Yet, it’d be stupid to say you can’t make them work. They come with a large community and pckages and solve a ton of problems that a homebrewed framework doesn’t even conceive of. And you can just start writing the stuff you need right away.
On the other hand, a homemade framework doesn’t require the extra overhead of knowing the framework, and maintaining it overtime. You don’t need to track down why the code gets run a gazillion times more than it needs to, you can debug through your events, etc.
They’re just different ways of doing things.
But mainly: react is a pain in the butt but if time is your constrain, it should get you to where you want to be faster than if you’re not using it.
The article is titled "Why Vanilla JS," but the takeaway seems to be "here are the custom abstractions I wrote."
https://xkcd.com/927/
*vanilla typescript
I like this article because it feels so pre-AI. This is what people were arguing about on HackerNews back in the day! How so very nostalgic it makes me feel.
But in response to the article: no, vanilla JS is a nightmare to keep your code organized, and battle tested frameworks do quite a good job at that. It's otherwise mostly a waste of time, or an intellectual exercise at most, to build an app with vanilla JS
Based and Vanilla JS pilled.
I know posts like this get a lot of whinging, but you are 100% right. The browser is in itself a platform; frameworks are not like some kind of hyper abstracted Web Scrinting Language for people too important to deal with "raw" CSS/DOM. They're a an awkward, alternate abstraction, slow as molasses, and they leak like a sieve.
Sad to see no mention of @ts-check. I love being able to write native browser JS modules with nearly all of the functionality from TypeScript.
4 years doing this before AI. Then I felt my tool was not quite right for the AI environment. Now I'm building something else with AI.