I’ve seen many, many people using a modern framework like React, Angular or Vue.js blindly. These frameworks provide lots of interesting things, but usually people miss the point about the deepest reason of their existence.
The Uniform Resource Locator — that humble string of characters that sits in the top of your browser — is something to aspire to. Its form is constructed from its function, each slash-separated-section being the structure of the website you’re currently browsing. It’s part way-finding and part navigation system; remove one of those slash separated sections and you move back through the whole structure. It’s beautiful in its simplicity.
The following will be a short explanation, along with some solutions, of a popular JavaScript question that tends to get asked in developer interviews.
Since introducing HTTP/2 into Node.js 8 in July of 2017, the implementation has undergone several rounds of improvements. Now we’re almost ready to lift the “experimental” flag.