weeklyfoo #56 is here: your weekly digest of all webdev news you need to know! This time you’ll find 43 valuable links in 6 categories! Enjoy!
🚀 Read it!
- Some important learnings from my 20 years of engineering life: Ten learnings about engineering by Milan Milanović / engineering / 19 min read
- Why I’m skeptical of rewriting JavaScript tools in “faster” languages: It’s about performance, contributions and debuggability by Nolan Lawson / tools / 17 min read
📰 Good to know
- The future of Postgres?: Postgres and its great extensions will shape the future. by Craig Kerstiens / databases / 4 min read
- Software Engineer Titles Have (Almost) Lost All Their Meaning: Examining the Devaluation of Software Engineer Titles and Its Impact on Tech Industry Integrity by Trevor I. Lasn / engineering / 7 min read
- Unlocking the Power of JSON Patch: JSON Patch is a standardized format defined in RFC 6902 for describing how to modify a JSON document. It was created to address the need for a simple, efficient, and standardized way to apply partial updates to resources, especially over HTTP. by Adrian Machado / json / 13 min read
- Promise.try(): New experimental function. by developer.mozilla.org / javascript / 7 min read
- How to fork: Best practices and guide by Joaquim Rocha / git, forking / 20 min read
- Introducing Express v5: A New Era for Node.js Framework: Finally the official blog post about express v5 by Wes Todd / express / 10 min read
- State of the software engineering job market in 2024: A deep dive into job market trends, the companies and cities hiring the most software engineers, growth areas, and more. Exclusive data and charts by Gergely Orosz / engineering / 13 min read
- How we built a new powerful JSON data type for ClickHouse: JSON has become the lingua franca for handling semi-structured and unstructured data in modern data systems. Whether it’s in logging and observability scenarios, real-time data streaming, mobile app storage, or machine learning pipelines, JSON’s flexible structure makes it the go-to format for capturing and transmitting data across distributed systems. by Pavel Kruglov / json / 23 min read
- What docs as code really means: What does docs-as-code really mean beyond the ability of building the docs from text files and versioning them using git? by Fabrizio Ferri Benedetti / docs / 6 min read
- Results of State of CSS 2024: See the survey results. by stateofcss.com / css / 6 min read
- Help us choose the final syntax for Masonry in CSS: I like how they want to get the community involved. by Jen Simmons, Elika Etemad, Brandon Stewart / css, masonry / 36 min read
- Next.js 15: Next major release of Next.js by nextjs.org / nextjs / 23 min read
- WebStorm and Rider Are Now Free for Non-Commercial Use: We’re excited to announce a change in our licensing model that we believe will benefit the developer community – WebStorm and Rider are now free for non-commercial use! by Ekaterina Ryabukha / webstorm / 12 min read
- Smarter than ‘Ctrl+F’: Linking Directly to Web Page Content by Ahmad Alfy / text-fragments / 6 min read
- Do’s and Don’ts of Commenting Code: What are the best (and worst) comments you can write in code, particularly when working on a project with a team including more developers? This article will show you what’s good (and what’s not!) so you can embrace best practices for commenting. by Ayomipo Odeyinde / comments, engineering / 13 min read
- Chakra v3: Next major release of the popular UI components by Segun Adebayo / ui / 8 min read
🧰 Tools
- Spare Cores: Harnessing the compute resources of the cloud to optimize efficiency and costs of batch and service tasks. by sparecores.com / costs, cloud
- Wireit: Wireit upgrades your npm/pnpm/yarn scripts to make them smarter and more efficient. by Google / npm, scripts
- Tailwind Gradient Generator: Effortlessly generate and customize gradients with user-friendly tools. Just select, copy, and paste the code—your Tailwind Gradient Generator does all the hard work for you! Perfect for vibrant designs. by gradienty.codes / tailwind, gradients
- vacuum: vacuum is the worlds fastest OpenAPI 3, OpenAPI 2 / Swagger linter and quality analysis tool. Built in go, it tears through API specs faster than you can think. vacuum is compatible with Spectral rulesets and generates compatible reports. by quobix.com/vacuum / swagger, openapi
- Vale: A markup-aware linter for prose built with speed and extensibility in mind. by vale.sh / linter
- Civet: A TypeScript superset that favors more types and less typing by civet.dev / typescript
- Color Thief: Grab the color palette from an image using just Javascript. Works in the browser and in Node. by Lokesh Dhakar / colors
- Rust Web Framework: Comprehensive framework for building web applications in Rust. by Lev Kokotov / rust
- ryde: ryde is a single person, single file web framework for rust by swlkr / rust
- Khoshnus: Craft Beautiful Handwritten SVG Text Animations by Amer-Jabar / svg
- Toolpad: Full stack components and low-code builder for dashboards and internal apps. by mui.com/toolpad / react
- GenAIScript: Automatable GenAI Scripting by Microsoft / ai
- Medusa: The world’s most flexible commerce platform. by medusajs.com / ecommerce
- match-sorter: Simple, expected, and deterministic best-match sorting of an array in JavaScript by Kent C. Dodds / matching
- Vizzu: Library for animated data visualizations and data stories. by lib.vizzuhq.com / charts, animation
- Rsbuild: The Rspack-based build tool. It’s fast, out-of-the-box and extensible. by rsbuild.dev / tools
- Awesome Docs: A crowdsourced, open-source gallery for high-quality dev docs. by awesome-docs.gallery / docs
- ApiHub: Your own API Hub to learn and master API interaction. Ideal for frontend, mobile dev and backend developers. by Hitesh Choudhary / apis
🎨 Design
- The biggest font trends to look out for in 2025: From a sans-serif backlash to neo-retro revivals, our experts predict a diverse typographic landscape for the coming year. by Katy Cowan / fonts / 20 min read
- UX is a joke, and it’s inexcusable: Designer Mathew Wilson on why we should worry that bad user experience has become a punchline. by Mathew Wilson / ux / 5 min read
- new CSS logo?: Nice to see the discussion and proposals about a new CSS logo by css-next / css / 39 min read
🤪 Fun
- Why does man print gimme gimme gimme at 00:30?: Nice easter egg in man command - unfortunately already removed. by stackexchange.com / cli / 13 min read
- Is my blue your blue?: Check how you see blue and green. by ismy.blue / colors / 0 min read
📺 Videos
- Web3 Is Going Just Great: Best known for puncturing blockchain/crypto hype with her Web3 Is Going Just Great project, writer/researcher Molly White believes a better web is possible. by Molly White / web3
- Writer/Researcher: Writer/researcher Erin Kissane is working to build better and safer networks for collective survival, with efforts including the COVID Tracking Project, a powerful 40,000 word analysis of Meta’s role in the Rohingya genocide in Myanmar, and current research into the culture and governance of the next wave of social networks. by Erin Kissane / covid