@paul23 Civil engineering to the rescue. You have an 75 yesrs old building, and it is outdated. No gas, failing power system, full of uneven floors which prevents wheelchairs and strollers, etc. Now, if you rebuilt it room by room, you must reinforce its structures first, i.e. build a node-pascal bridge, before any work can start.
And until all work is done, the building will be under-construction; any accident may collapse the whole thing, old and new together (see Notre-Dame). Start a new building at another location is far safer, faster, and cost less almost always.
Also, while Node.js is maturing, it is not as mature as .Net for example. Multi-thread is difficult, and even small common tasks like DOM parsing requires a hundred dependency. I know Pascal and Fortan is old, but jumping to a rocking ship is going to the other extreme.
@cyberman123 Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. If you have a question, just post it, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help. If you want to report an abusive user or a problem in this room, visit our meta.
I'm new to react. I'm using React material UI for building by web application. I'm using the following template for this :- https://github.com/devias-io/react-material-dashboard. I'm trying to add a nested list in the sidebar. This is the code for Sidebar.js
import React from 'react';
import cls...
@Sheepy node.js is only useful for small scale web services
@paul23 depends of the price and what's he is willing to spend as "renovation" cost towards the acquisition and what he expect from the software. Since the people with expertise are on brink of retirement, it has a huge impact on training new devs to use the source code. Since there are no test units, you are not aware of all use cases a functionality is handling.
All information are all in the memory of those developers and has to be documented/passed on. Modifying it without verification can lead to bugs. Then, there is a huge cost when he expect new features because of 1. that training mentioned earlier, 2. those old devs might need some training as well, 3. refactoring of the original code base might be a need, which surely takes a lot time and 4. Node.js is a different environment than PASCAL/FORTRAN.
@KarelG Well he expects to have a single of the senior devs to convert it to modern codebase in like 2-3 years. While I cannot give any answer on that without seeing the codebase I'm more afraid those senior devs will actually "run away", 2 of them I know will retire directly with a third probably also going into the retirement. The 4th might stay, but how happy will he be learning a new language?