For a long time I have only used languages such as Java and c++ to make software. I now want to start with web-development, and have decided (and figured out) that javascript is the language of choice, which I will use to accomplish this goal. However, whenever I see all of these frameworks that I can use, I get a little dizzy lol. I started getting familiar with node.js, but I am not sure I should pair it with a front-end framework
Is it possible (and practical, for that matter) to build good, responsive and nice-looking websited only using node.js? Or am I better pairing it/using it in conjunction with another framework? Any help/opinions are appreciated :)
I see, I will take a look at angularjs, heard that was good, although I am open for suggestions of front-end frameworks that work good in conjunction with node.js :)
So.. yes.s. you need another framework. Well.. You need other parts.. wether you choose a whole 'framework' just just a few handy libraries is up to you
Do you have a specific project, or is this just learning?
Hm.. if you had to start layout out a full app tomorrow, i might say Angular, but I think React is a good place to start.
React has one special gotcha, though, if you are new to JS..
it prefers and extends modern ES6 (the current version os JS not supported by all browsers in the wild), so encourages you to also use transpiled JS, which means a build step.
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@SuperUberDuper Uhm. No, not really. If there's a bug in a library you fix it. It's a process that's very similar to what happens when there's a bug in your own code.
well that's the intended behaviour, not many windows application consist of a single executeable
and even mac applications .app files also rarely consist of a single executable, it's just an .app file which is a folder that contains all your resources
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so... this is weird. I am running debian mate, when I log in to my only user, nothing other than the default background image and cursor displays. Tried logging in as root (default gtk theme, if that makes a difference), and I could do stuff. Tried launching firefox from terminal, and no problem. Then in the terminal I tried # su username, and no issue, but when I ran firefox from there I got this:
user@debian:/home$ firefox
No protocol specified
Error: cannot open display: :0
and in fact it didn't work
and this happens with google-chrome: Gtk: cannot open display: :0
@littlepootis maybe you can manage
everything online from that error seems to be issues when sshing into a machine
which may possibly be it as I'm currently logged in as root and not as the user
and after rebooting and logging in as user I couldn't do anything other than move the cursor around. Tried tapping the power button, then a popup appeared and I chose to hibernate
at that point I got back from hibernating and logged in as root
This is awesome, I've a customer who uses a registrar that makes me fill out and print a PDF file and then mail it to them every time I need to change the DNS configuration
What. The. Actual. Puck.
"Please note that a digital signature is not valid"
@ivarni WTF? i mean for a domain ownership change i'd understand it but for dns changes? also, why not switch to dns servers under your (or the customer's) control?
If you do want them, just spend a few hours learning about the
You're basically doing every single mistake you've done before :P
I ditched Windows and switched to linux ~9 years ago. And the reason was that the file manager that the distro I used then shipped with allowed me to create files with any file extension.. easily, whereas Windows Explorer didn't.
Been learning it for a couple of months and I am familiar with the language fairly well. Been programming in java for a couple of years, so I have an easy time grasping new languages
Or should I just steer away from Angular all together, and just go with React and other frameworks?
@tomSurge A lot of people like angular and a lot of people like react. Keep in mind that it will help you a lot if you understand how the library/framework does what it does and why their abstractions work. React and angular does not really try to solve the same problem. Angular is a full-on framework while bare-bone react is mainly a view library. You will most likely be better prepared to compare them if you got some lower level knowledge of DOM APIs and how javascript apps are usually built
urgh, it looks as though when I run firefox& in the terminal, I still get control of the terminal, sure, but when I close the terminal firefox also closes (debian testing, mate DE)
how do I run an "unrelated" window from a terminal?
My charger is in the basement lol 100% battery, 7 hours and 30 minutes left, and the last thing opened was united airlines website to check into my vegas flight which was like 3 weeks ago