When's the last time a JS library was called a defacto standard and it was still the overwhelmingly dominant solution 3 years later?
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4/4: It's reasonable for ppl to want to use popular tools, but "defacto standard" as a synonym for "popular" is hurting more than helping.
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It’s an instance of my favorite slogan: there’s no shortcut to consensus.
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People (understandably!) want to avoid the churn of working out shared solutions, but avoiding the hard work often just prolongs the debate.
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You can just say the names of the libraries, Yehuda

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I promise that, at least this morning, I don't have much in mind. Maybe Backbone and Angular 1?
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More recently people occasionally have talked about React as being a defacto standard but there's a TON of competition and I'm not worried.
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Webpack is probably being overstated in this way. I'd be surprised if Webpack (at least resembling today's form) was dominant in 2020.
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webpack is the current defacto for bundling. Saying that it being a canonical standard for bundling hasn't hurt people's attempt to innovate
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See Fusebox, SystemJS, brunch, Bankai, InterlockJS, etc.
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