But the fact that nobody goes around making people feel guilty for using libraries in Android makes a difference.
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The other weird thing is corporations do own the end to end experience and always have. IE, Chrome, Safari.
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And by weird, I just mean the framing of this argument. I guess the last time a corp tried something like this, would be dart. And well...
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Corps own the browser—I meant more along the lines of Facebook hypothetically owning React, Jest, webpack, lodash, Gulp, TypeScript, LESS, etc, and taking it as a first priority that they ALL work seamlessly together.
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They own an editor, flowtype, jest, react, redux, helped communication of webpack in the early days. That is p full.
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I don't think they own an editor - MS owns Code if that's what you were thinking (surprising, I know). But yeah, I'm grateful for as much as Facebook's contributed - they've pushed web dev forward incredibly. Still doesn't hurt to compare to native solutions like .net
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They do. It’s called nuclide ;)
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