Amazed to see @fastify/vite just hit 8k downloads weekly. The next minor release will include an important fix for HMR and the @fastify/vue and @fastify/react microshells are being extracted into a separate project so they can be easily reused by other stacks.
Work on the 2nd Edition of Happy Little Monoliths has begun and will go beyond Fastify, covering the Minimum Common Web Platform API with h3 and Vite as well. Plus it will finally include a full SaaS example, covering the book's own new website with Stripe integration and secure order fulfillment. All 1st Edition readers will receive the 2nd Edition for free.
https://t.co/aKEfJHFoyc
I am genuinely blown away.
This is the best 30 minutes you'll ever spend on YouTube and believe me, I have wasted enough hours of my life there to have a basis for comparison.
https://t.co/7Inz7Cv4eY
I can understand why Bun does it, but these attempts of nudging users away from Vite and Vitest ignores the fact that Bun's corresponding features are not fully equivalent replacements.
Vite & Vitest gives you:
- Better non-React framework support
- Better production bundle quality (treeshaking, minification, chunk split control)
- More abundance of ecosystem plugins
- (vitest) Better test correctness (global state isolation by default)
- (vitest) Browser mode so you can run your component tests in actual browsers
- (vitest) IDE integrations, benchmarking, type testing, sharding...
Bun is great, but make sure you understand the trade-offs of these choices! In many cases, you probably *should* use Vite and Vitest alongside Bun.
So @antfu7 just quietly dropped this about a week ago. I absolutely love it. After this, the next evolutionary step in our web development stack is fast custom element SSR.
https://t.co/i9pEs4XeqA
I cut my hand pretty badly as I went to pick up the pieces of a broken glass and spent half a day with stitches and using only one hand to work. TIL I'm totally useless with one hand. Also it's the first time I used Mac's dictation feature and it's kind of awesome.