I thought it was great. On the topic of dead versus done open source projects: library authors might add periodic commits that indicate the code (for petite vue, in this case) is believed to be still valid. I am guilty of simply looking at the last commit to judge if a library is worth testing .
What a great episode. I am so glad you guys started this podcast. You guys did a great interview with Evan. I was worried that this was just going to be a repeat of the "10years of Vue" talk that Evan gave at recent conferences but instead it was a great in-depth interview with Evan and his motivations and reasoning for the direction that Vue has taken. Well done guys, I always look forward to your either watching your videos or most often just listening to your podcast. Please keep this going as it really fills in a void that has been missing in Vue.
I'm new Vue user and off course I'll use Nuxt at some point. I've been listening to your podcast in car for last few days. It's like talking to your Programmer friends. Thank you for such a great time. You guys are doing great!
Thanks! This was my favourite part as well. I don't think I've ever heard Evan talk about the origin story elsewhere (I could just be ignorant though).
having to learn react to get a job is such a strong mentality for some people. But honestly you should be able to switch between the 2 of them, especially since Vue is so easy. At the end they are both JS frameworks and fairly similar.
Revisiting the old days of IE support is therapeutic for old devs like me. IE never died a clean death. We have come a long way and using Vue and Nuxt is such a pleasure for me. We now have a wonderful distillation of the best parts of web dev history.
How come? 👀 And on that note: I think any dev familiar with either React, Vue, Svelte (and probably also Angular to some extend) shouldn't have a big issue switching to a different framework after learning the core concepts of one. 😁
How did you like the episode folks? 👀
I thought it was great.
On the topic of dead versus done open source projects: library authors might add periodic commits that indicate the code (for petite vue, in this case) is believed to be still valid. I am guilty of simply looking at the last commit to judge if a library is worth testing .
Great episode! Need more episodes with Evan!! It would be amazing if there was a regular episode with him.
One of my favourite episodes, I wish I could talk about Vue like Evan and convince my bosses to use it at larger scale 🥺
Happy you enjoyed it! ✨
Why is your boss against using Vue at larger scale?
Because he thinks React is better ☹️
When tech decisions are made by bosses who have dated understanding, they just want to play it safe, it creates a hellish lack of progress.
What a great episode. I am so glad you guys started this podcast. You guys did a great interview with Evan. I was worried that this was just going to be a repeat of the "10years of Vue" talk that Evan gave at recent conferences but instead it was a great in-depth interview with Evan and his motivations and reasoning for the direction that Vue has taken.
Well done guys, I always look forward to your either watching your videos or most often just listening to your podcast. Please keep this going as it really fills in a void that has been missing in Vue.
I'm new Vue user and off course I'll use Nuxt at some point. I've been listening to your podcast in car for last few days. It's like talking to your Programmer friends. Thank you for such a great time. You guys are doing great!
Thank you so much for your kind message 🙏🏻
Really glad this gives you a good time and also some new insights ☺️
Nice episode guys! Very interesting to hear some of the background behind Vue and why some decisions were made the way they were.
Thanks! This was my favourite part as well. I don't think I've ever heard Evan talk about the origin story elsewhere (I could just be ignorant though).
having to learn react to get a job is such a strong mentality for some people. But honestly you should be able to switch between the 2 of them, especially since Vue is so easy. At the end they are both JS frameworks and fairly similar.
Thanks for such an amazing episode, looking forward to next one ❤
Glad you enjoyed that one 🙏
We also can't wait to unveil the last half of our conversation 👀
Revisiting the old days of IE support is therapeutic for old devs like me. IE never died a clean death. We have come a long way and using Vue and Nuxt is such a pleasure for me. We now have a wonderful distillation of the best parts of web dev history.
JSX toggle in the docs
感谢祖师爷赏饭吃,vite就是god-like,不过我实际上一直在写react,虽然它很垃圾,我也不知道是什么原因
А вы то же сначала не поверили, что это правда?😮
Но это правда! 🎉
@@DejaVueFm big fan of Russia and China, don't you?
@@antidegenerates7449 get a life weirdo
@@antidegenerates7449 Especially a big fan Of DeepL 🥴
Using Vue was the worst decision I made on the start of my dev career. I wish I've picked React from the start 😁
How come? 👀
And on that note: I think any dev familiar with either React, Vue, Svelte (and probably also Angular to some extend) shouldn't have a big issue switching to a different framework after learning the core concepts of one. 😁
What a bizarre thing to say.
brainrot is real