![]() This gives React developers an incremental way to try out Qwik, without having to rewrite their app from scratch.īottom Line: As much JavaScript as I want and my site will still be blazing fast? What’s next, zero-calorie orange chicken? □Ĭheck out the free trial of their real-time Node.js log management platform. It doesn’t try to bash React as an “anti-pattern” - instead, Qwik and its Qwik City meta-framework embrace many core concepts from React and Next.js like JSX, directory-based routing, middleware, and more.Īnd now they’ve released Qwik React - which lets you use React (and every React component and library) within Qwik itself. ![]() ![]() When it comes to the DX, the most unique thing about Qwik’s approach might be that it’s not actually that unique at all, by design. You just build whatever you want, however you want, and Qwik makes sure you always get a perfect lighthouse score - because it only downloads the bare minimum amount of JavaScript needed for each interaction. This means you don’t need to worry about how much JavaScript you’re adding or how your site is being lazy loaded. So with SSR, the whole app can be shipped to the browser as just HTML, where it will resume loading where it left off - without needing to execute any JavaScript. This “precision lazy-loading” is possible because Qwik apps are fully serialized as HTML. As users interact with your site, the relevant parts of it load on demand. Here’s a quick TLDR on how it works:įully interactive sites are able to load with a tiny amount of JavaScript, then pick up from where the server left off. That’s the name of Qwik’s unique rendering approach, which doesn’t require any of the “pure overhead” that comes with traditional hydration. That’s cool, and now I’m craving Panda Express, but we’ve heard this “best-of-both-worlds” pitch from lots of JS frameworks. “Qwik’s philosophy is to ensure the easy path is the performant path.” □♂️ ![]() And their announcement post had one key line that sounded straight out of a JavaScript fortune cookie: Jack be Nimble, Jack be QwikĪfter months of hype, Qwik 1.0 launched on Monday □. ![]()
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