I think Tyler is not really flashy with his marketing compared to other educators, and I believe that he constantly undersells his teaching. The good thing is that he always overdelivers. I really dig his explanations and I really like how he manages to create a liniarity to his teaching, in such a way, that it's easy to deduce where things are going. Basically, he tries to organize things in such a manner, that it's easy for you to reason about taking certain decisions.
@@uidotdev Hi, honestly if you were to be consistent with your uploads I could easily see this as an equivalent to the fireship channel. Your SSR videos are amazing, have you considering doing SSR from scratch with AWS lambda architecture ? I feel like that could blow up. Everyone starts with a framework or some sort of boilerplate setup. No one dwells into how rather than having an express server to render routes you would implement an AWS api-gatewatey that routes to lambdas which render your pages. Tenks Jan
I never planned to watch this video through, but within the first few seconds I was hooked! Before I knew it, I had watched it all! Great, entertaining and educational video, definitely deserves attention!
I agree with everyone else in the content section, this was an INCREDIBLE video. Goes to the point on a fascinating topic and doesn't add any unnecessary stuff. You can also tell the amount of research that went into it. Subbed and looking forward to the next one!
Awesome video, please make more like this. Here are a few ideas. 1. Why so many people hate Angular 2+? 2. How Vue became popular? 3. Why Elm failed but Swelte succeeded? 4. Why flutter web will do down? 5. Will compile to wasm frameworks replace react ?
Angular 2 was too complicated and inflexible. You had to install all the Javascript written in the world to run a basic Angular 2 application, and learn a whole dictionary of framework specific concepts. The Angular module system specifically was atrocious. Vue was just a good medium between Angular and React. You could use it with a single script tag on the page and a few lines of code, but it also could be expanded to fit your needs.
Thank you algorithm for suggesting this fantastic piece of content. Thank you for doing these, I have had a need for web related essays. Please keep doing what you are doing, it is working. I especially appreciate your background work, it brings a lot of value to new and old devs alike
While watching this video I got the feeling I was watching a documentary. I really like your camera angles and how you transition between frames. I also like how easy sounding the pitch is with no need for any added music. Truly something I haven't seen in the youtube tech/webdev space : Documentary style explanation of everyday web tooling This is great, and I wish you continue producing awesome content like this. Thanks!
Don't know if it would be worth the extra effort, but would be nice to have a "bibliography" with links to your sources (e.g. the lectures) in the description. Would help those of us wanting to dig deeper.
Amazing video. Loved it. And also, React is the first and only widely adopted framework based on functional programming principles. As someone who's a huge fan of FP approach to coding, I really love the fact that React is opening up the eyes of programming world to the beauty of FP
Could u give me an example of how it does FP in the framework? As someone who has read about FP but know little about react, Id love to understand better.
It's criminal how little views you have. Loving the content, and the visuals also look really great. altho your voice is a bit quiet, as if you are in a library, but I bet it will change to the better with experience. Either way, keep the content coming.
Thank you! We're still fairly new to the YT game (taking it seriously, that is). So I think we'll start picking up soon. Also still fine tuning audio - thanks for the feedback!
I’m not a web programmer, but still LOVED your video! This is the first one of yours I’ve come across, and instantly got me to subscribe. It’s super clean and polished. I’d love to see you make a couple videos for a bit of a wider programmer audience (e.g. not assuming we know what a dom node is or how react works). A little bit of explanation would’ve helped me follow along with the video better. Excited for your next video!!
I am disappointed to see this video having very less views; this deserves more than a million. Thanks for the high quality video mate, you earned a sub!
Great video ! I would like to suggest that for future videos, you equalize the audio by reducing/cutting the low frequency sounds. Your voice is very soothing, but right now there is too much low end frequencies and it makes your voice sound very boomy and muddy and compromises speech intelligibility. Increasing the distance between your mouth and the microphone can also help with this problem as it reduces the overamplification of low end frequencies (due to the proximal effect of the mic). I believe that this would make your already excellent production quality even better :)
I can really relate to the love/hate relationship with JSX btw. I used Vue and angular for years, needed to switch to react when I didn't really like it but now, after a year, I got to enjoy it a lot
I hardly know much about UI/UX development, but your explanations and delivery of info made this really easy to follow, even if I didn’t understand names such as “doms” and “mutations”. Great vid!
After several months study HTML CSS JavaScript, today I decided to jump into React. This video is very explanatory this guy's voice makes me less fear about React. Thanks for the video!
This is 🔥Originally as a web developer, I was really excited that could get my HTML (JSX), JS, and CSS (CSS in JS) all under the same type of system (TypeScript). The component programming model is now used beyond the web platform, it is a testament to how elegant this model is.
I believe it also gained a lot of traction when Angular 2 came out and people were mad that migrating from Angular 1 to 2 required essentially a rewrite. I think few things really fell into place and it just gained enormous amount of traction and it seems like it's not slowing down. And regarding JSX, man ever since I've used JSX in a real project, I just didn't want to go back to HTML templating. There are some things I do dislike about React, but overall I believe it really shifted how we approach building UI and it still continues to push things forward.
Really love you videos, watched till the end. Actully I learned a A great deal of react from your course too. Thanks for that. Your Awsome. btw love how u put meme in betwn.❤
Please more of this!!😊 would also be awesome if you would make in-depth explanations on state management regarding react, the more tech side of the same story
more video like this please. I like the people with actual experience give a summary rather than those youtube give a summary base on their research. Maybe next video talk about which framework to choose.
Summed up the last 15 years of my life in 10 minutes! Loved it! :D Though I'm still very particular about how the HTML, JS, and CSS go together in that component. :P
Personally I started programming in C# with the unity game engine which uses a component system for every object. You code components and then add them to objects based on what you want them to do. Moving over to web development and learning how react works was fairly easy because it's a very similar concept.
Thanks for this vid, I'm having to do a presentation to management and a bunch of BE devs on why we're moving to react. In order to explain it, I've gone into the history, but I don't feel what I've been saying is convincing. You raised points here which I think is what I'm missed conveying.
This is a must watch to all, its answers why did we end up here, this is how we should learn, knowing that why did we even need it / what it solves. Kudos man !! Keep your content this way its very intresting
I remember being part of that group that disliked React, and so I created my own web framework, however I decided to give it another chance with another website I needed to make because I didn't feel like using the framework I created and started loving React. Many things that were complicated to write were now much simpler without any noticeable performance issues.
@@tosibinaronmurojegede4566 it's not simple, but you write the code that takes text, content, or other files as an input. Has a system that generates HTML that can be in the form of a static file or generated on the server. On the client side, you'll need to figure out how to handle events like user inputs, states from the server, etc. and have the website be able to react to them by making changes to the DOM.
Awesome video, it could be really cool if following this path you could hook this video to also explain the born of Vue and Svelte (maybe explaining the distinctions between virtual dom, shadow dom and the Svelte approach (that seems more jQuery oriented)
React introduced me to immutability by showing me the benefits in predictability of my apps & easy of maintaining big code bases compared to jQuery. This got me interested in functional programming to see what other good lessons I could apply in Javascript. I have added pure functions and some functional composition to my tool belt since then.
@@uidotdev That is definitely a good part of it. I wonder what would happen if you rolled it out with no hype. How long would it take to actually catch fire