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I'm new to web development and I want to make some small web applications like a video downloaders, an document converter, and that sort of apps. I know that I can use either a JavaScript framework (react, vue, or angular) or php (laravel) but I'm confused which one is best suited for this situation.
I don't know if the this is the right place to ask this kind of questions but I want to know your opinion, so should I go with JavaScript or go the php route? I'll appreciate you help guys and thanks.
This is a very subjective question. Personally I'd recommend NodeJS or PHP as I'm not a big fan on PHP for my own subjective reasons.
My recommendations:
NodeJs: Great ecosystem, lots of shared knowledge
Use Webstorm from Jetbrains
Learn about docker, use it and make your deployments easy
Use something like Heroku until you establish it's limitations for you then you'll be better equipped to understand why you want to host another way.
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First of all hi to all, I am new at web development and I have some questions. I have started a web site few weeks ago(html,css,js) and now I don't know how to continue. what is the next step for my project and how can I practice without publish it in a server? Nowdays I am learning php and ruby but it is more complex to understand the back end of a web site.
Since you have already started a website, add more functionalities to it. This way, you can enhance the project and at the same time learn new things as you develop. For example, if the project is in HTML, learn Bootstrap and implement the same to the project. You can publish various versions of the project. If you do not wish to publish, you can work on it locally too.
You mentioned that you are learning PHP. Why not just throw in some data to the HTML using PHP and perform some CRUD operations on it? That would be a great way to learn!
https://www.w3schools.com/ is a great website to learn.
Wish you Goodluck and I hope I helped!
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Meteor.js integrates well inside a Mantra.js architecture, but does it have advantages since it slows the running of my requests.
For instance a dummy request in GraphQL (get a random string from the server) runs in few ms using Apollo Client and 1 second and more using Mantra.js (exact same request wrapping Apollo stack).
It only depends what kind of project you want to work on.
Mantra.js is an architecture framework for Meteor.js, that means :
it helps a developer to follow the creation and development of its modules corresponding to the Mantra framework. The developer is free to use any kind of front-end library he/she wants, any Data Query and Client caching he wants, but in my opinion, it doesn't really improve the quality of the code. Someone can organize a project with own rules and it can be maintainable easily.
So if your team is comfortable with your code structure you definitively don't need something like Mantra.js.
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So I recently stumbled upon jscrambler.com
This tool actually allows you to protect your javascript code, its fascinating. However, the service is cloud based and im wondering if this is really ok. Since im actually posting code on their servers. While others cant steal my code, it is still vurnerable to theft from within the the guys behind jscrambler.
Maybe im worrying too much. Is it safe to use jscrambler services?
You're right. Giving your code to a 3rd party to protect it is as counter-productive as it is counter-intuitive.
That said, browser users always have access to the underlying Javascript code. The most you can do is wrangle the source code by making syntactic changes that produce the same functionality but result in harder-to-read text.
This process is known as uglification or minification (since it reduces file size). UglifyJS is the most frequently used tool for this.
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Recently I attended a presentation of SPA/API/Nodejs, it looks good, so I start to google a lot and try to figure out, but get confused more.
It seems that in a SPA website, when use click, for example, a user's profile, it will call some API like http://example.com/profile/username and get a JSON data and will be displayed.
And I found a lot of frameworks, express.js/meanjs/Mojitojs/angularjs/reactjs and so on. really get lost.
So I'm going to develop a website, which will not be a SPA, but I really like Nodejs, so I'll use nodejs and i also like the idea of API to get data and display.
Can you recommend some framework to start?
SPA Frameworks: AngularJS, React.js
Node.js Webserver frameworks: Express.js, Meteor, Sails.js
You can also check Yeoman generators which help you to create a project skeleton.
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I want to build a web application which provide a some kind of analysis service.
I hope to build the back-end with PHP or JavaEE which supports RESTful API.
For front-end I want some framework to use light, easy for development/learn, ... etc.
I heard about AngularJS or ExtJS. which is better?
It depends with your expectations. But seems more suitable choice for you AngularJS.
May be you should do some research around..
This is bit fare comparison.
But Even in that article something are seems wrong. (Ex:- he said angular is harder to understand, for me it's not). So, you'll be finding more of opinion based answers.
Best thing is after doing some reading try to use both of them, then you decide what to use.
Anyway, AngularJS will be better if you are looking for opensource/free framework.