Plus a tool to slice and dice JSON, Preact 10.1, and Dr. Axel's new JavaScript book.
Fx 16.0: A Command-Line JSON Processing Tool — If you’ve got some files full of JSON that you want to process, Fx will slice and dice it however you want, including using JavaScript one-liners to add a bit of logic to the process. Anton Medvedev |
Creating a JSON Parser with JavaScript — Sure, you could just use JSON.parse but where’s the challenge in that? This is a neat step-by-step guide on implementing a JSON parser of your own. Tan Li Hau |
Software Engineers, Frontend at Fictiv (San Francisco) — We bring a user friendly experience to manufacturing, making it easy to turn designs into real products. Use the latest tech and JS to iterate quickly, ensuring a rapid feedback loop between us and our customers. Fictiv |
Find a Job Through Vettery — Make a profile, name your salary, and connect with hiring managers from top employers. Vettery is completely free for job seekers. Vettery |
JavaScript Component-Level CPU Costs — Did you know that in Chrome 78+ on Linux you can actually track how many CPU instructions are used in the rendering of your components? Interesting, though advanced, performance monitoring stuff here. Stoyan Stefanov |
Inversion of Control — A simple principle that can drastically improve your reusable code. Kent C Dodds |
Visual Studio Code November 2019 Released — VS Code is perhaps the most popular editor in the JavaScript world and this release has a lot going for it, not least a new experimental WebGL renderer you can use to make the integrated terminal a lot faster. Just to show no favoritism though, Vim 8.2 just came out too ;-) Microsoft | |