Frameworks without a path to Web Components are the 2016 equivalent of systems that still use <table> + <img> for rounded corners.
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Replying to @slightlylate
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@slightlylate this is exactly the problem I have with Web Components: instead of designed to complement existing FWs, it is designed with3 replies 1 retweet 11 likes -
Replying to @youyuxi
: huh? You can use each of the pieces independently, and it absolutely interoperates. If your FW genereates DOM, it can use WC.
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Replying to @slightlylate @youyuxi
I've never got this particular objection. Instead of a framework generating divs it makes WCs. No big deal AFAICT.
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Replying to @aerotwist @slightlylate
assuming WCs are only intended for leaf nodes or an encapsulation mechanism, yes
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Replying to @youyuxi
: that's up to the WC author. Which makes it an implementation quality issue, not fundamental. /cc
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Replying to @slightlylate @aerotwist
the point is, WC as is currently specced does not deliver what it claims to solve, and FWs see little value in
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Replying to @youyuxi
: it's cool. Hopefully your framework can achieve reasonable perf some other way (although I worry). /cc
@aerotwist2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @slightlylate @youyuxi
: I'm seeing a lot of "uncanney valley" from traces of frameworky apps. Ecosystem-wide failure.
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Replying to @slightlylate @aerotwist
back to the original thread: “end framework wars” is something WC can’t possibly do, and is imo a wrong goal
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: not in general, only about how you define components. Please compete up the stack where you can add value!
/cc @aerotwist
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