The time is right for a DOM templating API
218 points by mdhb 1 week ago | 251 comments- taeric 1 week agoHard not to laugh out loud at "We know what good syntax for templating looks like." We don't. Not even close. Because I'd hazard a good template is almost certainly more of a visual thing than it is a symbolic one. Is why dreamweaver and such was so successful back in the day. And why so many designers learn with tools like photoshop.
Also hard not to feel like this is reaching hard to try and recreate xslt. :( It is inevitable that someone will want to template something that isn't well formed, but can combine into a well formed thing. And then you are stuck trying to find how to do it. (Or correlated entities on a page that are linked, but not on the same tree, as it were. Think "label" and "for" as an easy example in plain markup.)
If I could wave my magic wand, what we need is fewer attempts to make templates all fit in with the rube goldberg that is the standard document layout for markup. People will go through obscene lengths to recreate what judicious use of absolute positioning can achieve fairly well. Sure, you might have to do math to get things to fit, but why do we feel that is something that we have to force the machine to do again and again and again on the same data?
- wahern 1 week ago> Also hard not to feel like this is reaching hard to try and recreate xslt.
I was never a fan of XML, but XSLT was (is!) a killer redeeming feature of the ecosystem. And it's still widely supported in browsers! It was such a shame that XML caught on where it sucked--configuration, IPC, etc--but languished where it shined, as a markup language with an amazing transformation capability in XSLT.
I think where XSLT fell over was that it's a real DSL, and a declarative, pure, functional DSL at that. People like to talk a big game about DSLs, but inevitably they're simplistic syntactic exercises that don't actually abstract the underlying procedural semantics of popular host languages. When faced with a well-designed DSL that makes difficult tasks trivial... people can't be bothered to learn.
- PaulHoule 1 week agoThe thing most people never got about XSLT is that it is really about production rules -- and production rules (e.g. the major path to "expert systems") are one of the most solidly rejected technologies in software engineering.
I didn't understand this until I spent a few years going down a rabbit hole asking questions like "why don't people like production rules?" In the case of templating people expect to make a template with a top-down organization that looks like the output, whereas XSLT really wants you build transformations from the bottom-up. On some level the bottom-up part is clear, particularly if you want to code-generate your rules (towards the end I was writing production rules that write production rules) but what is not clear is how the parts all fit together: you can't visually tell between an XSLT that builds the structure you want vs one that doesn't.
I think the most fun I ever had with XSLT was when I used an XSLT engine with user-defined procedures and had them create side effects, such as matching certain patterns in an XML document and making SQL inserts, though that was a long time ago when we were still using terrible XML parsing libraries.
- notpushkin 1 week agoI’m a big fan of XHTML (strictness is good) and feel like XSLT could be a great addition, but I hate the syntax. I’d love to build a Jinja to XSLT compiler one day.
I also have a simple playground for XSLT: https://xsltbin.ale.sh/
- nine_k 1 week agoXSLT's weaknesses are the extension of its strengths. It's the first homoiconic, purely functional language that enjoyed widespread adoption among "normal" developers, not type theory wonks.
But XML's syntax sucks, and so inevitably does XSLT's, because XSLT is just XML. Were it s-expressions, the syntax could suck slightly less. It was (is!) a small price to generate XSLT using XSLT, which makes XSLT very powerful and expressive if you hold it right, almost like a Lisp. This saved me a few times around year 2000 or so.
- nine_k 1 week ago
- Mikhail_Edoshin 1 week agoXSLT is not bad, but XML, unfortunately, is normally misused, so XSLT is tainted as it has to be a part of that misuse.
The true role of XML are grammar-based notations. These occur in two places: when a human gives data to a machine and when a machine produces data for a human. This is where XML is used despite its often mentioned shortcomings; for example, many notations to describe the user interface are based on XML. This is convenient, because user interfaces are created manually. (I am not mentioning text markup, it is well known.)
Yet XML was often used as a notation for machine-to-machine exchange. For example, the ONIX book description standard. Here data are moved between two computers, yet for some reason they have to form grammatically correct phrases according to a set of grammar rules. Computers do not need grammar. They do just fine with non-grammatical data, like a set of tables. It is way simpler for them; parsing or generating grammar, even explicit, is pure overhead for data exchange and is only necessary when data enters or leaves the computed pipeline.
So, to your examples: configuration in XML is actually fine, but IPC is not. Configuration is written by hand, IPC happens between machines. IPC specification, on the other hand, is also a good fit for XML.
That said, XML and thus XSLT has another flaw: it is way too verbose and has no good way to format it. Conciseness was an explicit no-goal but now we can say it was a mistake.
- PaulHoule 1 week agoI thought Tim Bray's XML spec was one of the most beautiful tech documents I'd every seen when I saw it for the first time. Adding namespaces at that point in history though was a disaster. Back then developers just weren't used to that kind of rigor (when I first started coding Java I had to go to a website run by frickin' NASA to get a clear explanation of how namespaces worked.)
It didn't help that Microsoft dropped a stick of over-complicated standards that tried to bring RPC into XML. RPC has always been a cursed concept because between (1) trying to be intellectually coherent and (2) caring about performance RPC systems become incomprehensible and it doesn't matter if it is Sun RPC, DCOM, CORBA, "Web Services", Protocol Buffers, etc.
The fact that the "REST economy" is intellectually incoherent and could care less about performance seems to have helped it succeed. Right now I just wrote a javascript function that looks like
and it doesconst get_item = async (item_id) => {...}
and I have a Java function on the server that looks likeGET /item/{item_id}
and is tagged with some annotations that make it get called when that GET request. Jackson lets me write an Item as an "anemic domain object" that gets turned into the exact JSON I want and the only real complaint I have is that the primitive types are anemic so representing dates is a hassle.Item getItem(String item_id)
- connicpu 1 week agoThe XML abuse I've seen at work is truly horrifying. We use protobuf for most of our inter-service IPC, but for one particular team one of their customers demands the use of XML so that it can be run through some XSLT "security" filters, so they have to transform a fairly large protobuf object into XML, run it through said filters, and then convert it back to protobuf :( I weep every time I think about it.
- PaulHoule 1 week ago
- froh 1 week agohere on HN I dare to out myself as a DSSSL lover, the scheme based predecessor of xslt.
I still can't wrap my head around how the neat and clean dsssl syntax, a real programming language, was replaced by an xml notation for the same: for cuntional code and a framework. because semantically, that's what xslt is: a functional language with a framework, geared at transforming xml instances.
but that syntax... and of course a much inferior and more obscure language than scheme underneath dsssl.
- striking 1 week agoWhy not implement a DSSSL-to-XSLT compiler?
- striking 1 week ago
- eclipticplane 1 week agoIt's been a long number of years, but XUL (Mozilla/Firefox's UI layer) combined with XSLT was an incredible stack to build entire applications.
- wpm 1 week agoI regularly work with APIs in shell that return XML and XSLT is a goddamn super power. I adore it.
- echelon 1 week agoXSLT was cool.
XML needs another syntax that isn't so verbose. Sort of like how OWL has XML, Manchester, Functional, and Turtle syntaxes for the same data structures.
XSLT needs a Turtle-style syntax.
XML in general (the data structure, not the syntax) needs a Turtle-style syntax.
- stuaxo 6 days agoIts annoying that support stopped at earlier versions, it grew so much more later.
- geocar 1 week ago> but languished where it shined, as a markup language with an amazing transformation capability in XSLT
I choose to look at this a little differently.
An XML application using XSLT is so much better (faster load times, faster to write, easier to make correct) than a JavaScript application with a JSON api, that XML is basically a secret weapon.
I only care enough that it stays in browsers, but otherwise I'd prefer nobody know about it because it means less competition on things that matter (faster load times, faster to write, fewer bugs, etc). And I've got a half-baked JavaScript-based "renderer" I can finish in case some Google VP asshat goes looking for things to delete...
- marcosdumay 1 week agoXSLT is just not a good language. Every single attempt of making XML executables (and there were many) failed badly, always for this one good reason.
- PaulHoule 1 week ago
- moritzwarhier 1 week ago> Hard not to laugh out loud at "We know what good syntax for templating looks like." We don't. Not even close. Because I'd hazard a good template is almost certainly more of a visual thing than it is a symbolic one.
How do you come to this conclusion? It seems to me that what you mean is a general gripe with HTML+CSS, not with how it's generated.
And why do you bring up absolute positioning?
I hear this take on HN again and again and sure, absolute positioning has its place, and is needed for many things.
But when it's used for page/app layout, most of the time I came across this it was an absolute nightmare, falling apart at the slightest content (even text!) or screen size changes.
Even print newspaper layout can't work like this, because typography is involved, although it's probably a lot closer to what I imagine you are describing.
Maybe I'm misunderstanding you.
But when I was doing more CSS-intensive work (I still do a fair bit), developing something on a basis when someone created a layout based on absolute positioning that looked like it was "almost ready", it was a terrible time sink to try to fix it and recreating it using flex, flow et al for layout (I'm not that fond of grid outside of some scenarios, and at the time I didn't use it due to browser support) was always faster because the problems with absolute positioning as the main layout tool were basically unfixable.
Maybe there are techniques using calc() and viewport units where it makes sense, but absolute positioning is not suitable for any layout outside of completely static content and viewport dimensions, in my experience.
- taeric 1 week agoI've been in the opposite, where people will go through lengths to try and make it so that the defaultish dom layout makes things "fall into place" so that they had a very specific layout of elements. When a fairly simple set of elements with somewhat minimal styling would get what you wanted surprisingly easy. Provided you did a lot of up front calculation on your own.
Basically, my assertion used to be to draw out what you have in mind on grid paper. Then start creating the elements. I don't see how that flow could land you with the 100ish divs that you wind up with on something like a single blue sky post.
Is it a panacea? No. Of course not. Can a constraint language help? I think so.
I'll add that the flex layouts seem like an improvement over what used to be there. Even if I find it rather amusing that we seem to have settled back on tables for layout. :D (I suppose it is more like some of the layout managers from Java days, truthfully.)
But, fundamentally, the problem appears to be that the drop to symbolic text is just not something that everyone does the same way. As such, it is very easy to get into a lot of trouble with the number of cooks in the kitchen, as it were.
- moritzwarhier 1 week agoBut flex layout is fundamentally different from tables, I guess you meant grid with that reference?
It's not that every website uses CSS grid for layout.
Coincidentally, I took a look at the DOM+CSS of a bluesky post just a few days ago (very weird coincidence, since that was the first time I opned bluesky for months), and it did use old-school tricks like centering using CSS transforms, presumably because renders a tiny bit faster than flex centering, or avoids layout calculations when elements are added in a virtualized list.
Virtualized lists are also a good example for falling back to specifying exact pixel positions and dimensions for performance reasons, but these are usually determined with help of JS. I think the transform I saw was a translateX(-50%) one, so centering.
I totally get the canvas-like approach, but in a way the constraint-based flex layouts fall into the same line of thinking for me.
The issue with absolute positioning is the need to manually specify positions and dimensions for elements, which makes it useless unless you are working within a fixed box or only relating to the corners of one rectangle.
It is explicitly meant to remove elements from the normal layout flow so they overlap each other by default.
- moritzwarhier 1 week ago
- taeric 1 week ago
- chii 1 week ago> People will go through obscene lengths to recreate what judicious use of absolute positioning can achieve fairly well
the web has the requirement that the 'document' look good no matter what device size/dimension, orientation, and/or capability.
In regular apps (say, a windows app), you don't have this requirement. In mobile apps, there's a standardized set of sizes. Only on web do we have both!
- taeric 1 week agoNot really? People impose the idea that they can make this work. Yet no sites looked good on the Nintendo DS browser, and people were largely ok with that. Few sites look genuinely good on phones. People are largely ok with that.
- DangitBobby 1 week agoThe Nintendo DS browser was not good enough to use as a daily driver. My phone, on the other hand, I spend more time browsing on that than I do my computer. Some sites aren't great on it, but the vast majority are fine (reader mode will get you through 99% of the rest). I'd argue most sites don't "look good" on any device. It's really not that hard these days to make a site work on mobile, the navbar often is the most challenging part of it.
- DangitBobby 1 week ago
- taeric 1 week ago
- tshaddox 1 week agoI'd also argue that there are only superficial similarities between, say, React and Svelte. Yes, they both have a syntax based heavily on HTML, but they work very differently. React is the only major framework that works by having (mostly) normal JavaScript functions return lazy representations of markup (in the form of JSX). React has no template-level notion of looping or conditional rendering, because you use normal JavaScript for that.
- jdkoeck 1 week ago> Hard not to laugh out loud at "We know what good syntax for templating looks like."
First of all, it's not very nice to laugh in the face of someone advocating for progress on the web platform, which benefits everyone.
Second of all, yes we do now know what good syntax for templating is, it's basically jsx (and I'm saying this as someone who's really not a fan of React). It took the whole web by storm, it's been adapted for all kinds of frameworks, and it's undeniable that all js templating systems converged towards common attributes: templates-as-expressions, composition via nesting and control flow with just javascript (instead of specific template syntax).
- MrJohz 1 week agoIt's good when someone advocates for what they believe to be progress on the web platform, but it's not necessarily clear that this would be progress. And that line in particularly is amusing because we absolutely don't know what good syntax for templating looks like — that's why there's so many different options.
JSX is certainly the most popular because it's used in the most popular framework, but it has some very clear weaknesses. In particular, it has very clear semantics for a React-like, VDOM-based framework, but those semantics do not work as well for other kinds of framework.
For example, you mention control flow via ternaries/`.map`. This works great in React, where the entire template will be reevaluated every time any input changes. However, frameworks like SolidJS or Vue in Vapor mode work very differently, and typically evaluate JSX only once at component mount (or at least, as seldom as possible). To support these, these frameworks need to use either special components like `For`/`Show`, or directives like `v-if`.
There's also the issue of how to evaluate JSX. In theory, JSX is flexible, in that `<Cpt prop={expr} />` can be converted to any call of the form `h(Cpt, {prop: expr})`. Again, that's not true for SolidJS or Vapor mode Vue — in both of these frameworks, `expr` cannot be eagerly evaluated, so the traditional transforms just don't work. Both of these frameworks therefore have to include their own custom plugins for handling JSX correctly.
The author's suggestion to also use signals as a state mechanism suggests they're imagining something more along the lines of SolidJS. That's an odd choice (it's my personal go-to framework, but it's also very niche), but it also implies, as discussed, that JSX-in-the-browser wouldn't behave like JSX-in-React. From experience, that will cause problems! I've worked with React developers before who've really struggled to use SolidJS because of precisely this issue.
- JimDabell 6 days ago> yes we do now know what good syntax for templating is, it's basically jsx (and I'm saying this as someone who's really not a fan of React). It took the whole web by storm, it's been adapted for all kinds of frameworks, and it's undeniable that all js templating systems converged towards common attributes: templates-as-expressions, composition via nesting and control flow with just javascript (instead of specific template syntax).
This is not true. For instance:
Vue uses markup-based templates like this:
Svelte uses text-based templates like this:<ul> <li v-for="item in items"> {{ item.message }} </li> </ul>
Angular uses markup-based templates like this:<ul> {#each items as item} <li>{item.message}</li> {/each} </ul>
And let’s not forget that the world doesn’t begin and end with JavaScript. Most other templating systems are either markup-based or text-based. For instance, Jinja2 is text-based:<ul> <li *ngFor="let item of items"> {{ item.message }} </li> </ul>
JSX really isn’t that great. Sometimes it feels like most React devs don’t know how to write a for loop or if statement because they mostly use map(), ternaries, and short-circuiting, which are not very ergonomic compared with markup-based approaches.<ul> {% for item in items %} <li>{{ item.message }}</li> {% endfor %} </ul>
- Zanfa 6 days ago> JSX really isn’t that great. Sometimes it feels like most React devs don’t know how to write a for loop or if statement because they mostly use map(), ternaries, and short-circuiting, which are not very ergonomic compared with markup-based approaches.
I'm the last person to vouch for React and the horrors it has inflicted upon web development, but the one thing it definitely got right compared to Angular (and Vue) is the use of JS for control flow, rather than fake attributes and whole new language.
- Zanfa 6 days ago
- taeric 1 week agoI'm laughing because it just hits so hard. Started playing some role playing with friends again recently and we were looking for a template for the character sheets. You know what they have? A PDF. That is their template. Why? Because they design things that way.
And it is funny, because I can already feel the ideas that would go into templating this symbolically. Characters have 6 and 20 numeric attributes. But, I can already guess most would consider it a fault to manually place either of those on the page. Yes, the sheet has a limitation on how big your name can be. No, you can't really avoid that.
JSX is what happens when you no longer have a design and a dev team. It is great at that, even. But if you have a workflow where a designer makes a template and sends it over to a dev, it no longer really helps. You are much better off making something that can pick at artifacts that are handed off.
Instead, we seem to be aiming for an idea that will have to replace learning of everyone involved.
- rschristian 1 week agoI don't think you understand what "template" means here, this has absolutely nothing to do with design or end result on the page. At no point would a designer be involved with templating the DOM.
It's in contrast to the imperative `document.createElement(...)` & `parent.appendChild(...)` APIs which you otherwise use in vanilla JS.
- rschristian 1 week ago
- MrJohz 1 week ago
- dominicrose 1 week agoWe don't know what good syntax for templating looks like because HTML is complex enough and many have tried making it more complex with things like Blade for PHP or HTMX for example. For some reason I've always preferred JS to HTML. React components with JSX is a good balance. Not everyone agrees but that's OK.
- 1 week ago
- 9rx 1 week agoWe do know what is good. We may not know what is perfect, but perfect need not be the enemy of good.
- taeric 1 week agoWhat is good, then? Because I'm really not seeing it. Just peek at substack and bluesky to see how the templating ideas in web dev have turned out. (I'm assuming they are decent modern examples. If not, I'm game to see one.)
- 9rx 1 week agoThat which improves upon previous solutions.
I have no idea what substack and bluesky are, but I'll take that to suggest that someone used templating to create a mess. While that is no doubt true — someone can create a mess out of anything — would the same person have avoided the mess if the templating wasn't there? It is just ergonomics, after all, not some fundamentally different idea.
- 9rx 1 week ago
- taeric 1 week ago
- austin-cheney 1 week ago> Hard not to laugh out loud at "We know what good syntax for templating looks like." We don't.
The article fails to accept that performance and security aren’t addressed by vanity layers. This is a mistake repeated by web technologies when popular demand eventually crushes common sense, because hiring is more important than training/maintenance when the lowest levels of the work force can’t tell the difference and drives all design decisions.
If you want better performance or security you have to measure things, not wear a pretty dress and look the other way.
- wahern 1 week ago
- shermantanktop 1 week agoA basic lesson we've learned over and over is that API/ABIs aren't final. Application needs are never permanently fulfilled by a stable API, with all future problems considered to be app-level issues.
This proposal is a good example of how common issues with the platform are solved on top (React etc.) until we recognize them as a problem and then push them down. Polyfills are another example.
If a proposal like this succeeds, it lives a time in the sun, but then spends most of its useful life being the old thing that people are trying to work around, just like the DOM API, just like ECMA versions, just like old browsers, just like every other useful bit of tech that is part of the system but can't be touched.
Is it possible to think about entropy, extension and backcompat as primary use cases?
- btown 1 week agoIt's also the case that every feature in web standards means extra code that needs to be painstakingly maintained, and extra code that anyone trying to create a standards-compliant browser must implement. I want to see projects like https://servo.org/ actually have a chance to catch up over time, not always be chasing an expanding scope.
I want the web platform to have every possible capability that native platforms have (subject to privacy and sandboxing constraints, of course). And I want the developer experience of web developers to be incredible.
But these need to be balanced against the consequences of added complexity. And in this case, does native templating really improve developer experience? I'm not convinced the benefits outweigh the costs.
- quotemstr 1 week ago> A basic lesson we've learned over and over is that API/ABIs aren't final
I dunno --- getElementById has been stable for, what, 25 years? "There's no such thing as a stable API" is something said by people unable or unwilling to create interfaces that last. It's a statement of personal resignation, not cosmic impossibility. There are tons of counterexamples.
Application needs, like other needs, are infinite. You satisfy these needs by adding new APIs, not breaking working ones.
- bryanrasmussen 1 week agoI think you'll find that even the most unstable APIs have extremely stable parts to them.
At the same time I don't think there is actually anything that most people would consider an API that is open to public usage that has maintained that kind of stability that getElementById has, which after all is something most people would describe as a method of an API.
- bryanrasmussen 1 week ago
- troupo 1 week ago> A basic lesson we've learned over and over is that API/ABIs aren't final.
On the web they are. Once something is out in the open on the web, there will be people depending on this, in this exact form, forever.
That's why there are still APIs that end up in "smooshgate" because of decisions from 20 years ago: https://developer.chrome.com/blog/smooshgate
- dleeftink 1 week ago> spends most of its useful life being the old thing that people are trying to work around
But in the process, the base functionality has been propped up another level.
Incremental updates aren't worthwhile just because of userland requirements that will always discover new gaps, use-cases and blindspots.
- EasyMark 1 week agoIsn't that why you have versions and maintains backward compatibility with older versions, and don't change the "old" interfaces?
- btown 1 week ago
- pier25 1 week agoThe web really needs native templating, reactivity, and data binding.
I can't even begin to imagine how much CPU and bandwidth is wasted with billions of users downloading, parsing, and executing something like React.
- hyfgfh 1 week agoThat's alright now LLM and crypto make this waste seem minuscule
- strix_varius 1 week agoWith the TC39 signals proposal, part of that is making progress.
- CharlieDigital 1 week agoExcept React.....
- CharlieDigital 1 week ago
- ivape 1 week agoTwo way data binding and a jsx clone is kind of all anyone really needs.
- nwienert 1 week agoReact isn’t templating though.
- ivape 1 week agoThat's kind of like saying React isn't just a bunch of a functions (it is). What do the JSX templates compile down to?
- nwienert 10 hours agoMissed this but - there’s a very meaningful difference between templates and React at least how most people think of templates.
React lets you return dynamic tree structures and insert code anywhere inline in that structure. Most templates explicitly don’t allow that for good reason. Further, most but not all templating frameworks have special syntax for conditional logic and loops.
If JSX is templating then templating has no meaning. Would createElement() be a template? In that case all functional programming is.
- nwienert 10 hours ago
- ASalazarMX 1 week agoRespect for focusing on semantics but not contesting the CPU and bandwidth waste. That takes honesty.
- n2h4 1 week ago[dead]
- ivape 1 week ago
- hyfgfh 1 week ago
- d--b 1 week agoThe part about Signals is telling and illustrates well why the idea while laudable is practically unfeasible.
I get why OP likes signals. In every large enough project there is a half baked implementation of a DAG calc tree and it makes sense that a language could standardize one.
But these abstractions have a huge mental / implementation cost.
The problem, as with most engineering things is a tradeoff problem. The react model - where you just update the global state and re-render everything - is slower but easier on the brain. The signals model is faster, but so much effort.
Most apps out there don’t need to be crazy fast, and people will choose react because it’s just simpler.
But signals don’t really have anything to do with templating, do they? So why do we have to choose, could we have templating and signals as separate things?
Well OP thought about templating and realized you do need a way to tell the dom how to fit your templated node where it belongs and update it when things change.
And this is where these proposals fail. There needs to be a choice here. The API must pick a side (well technically it could allow for both, but ugh), and developers won’t ever agree which side it should go.
The big problem of UIs has always been how they update, not how they’re defined. Microsoft tried (and failed) at defining a ton of models, MVC, MVP, MVVM, and what not, all of them were painful AF. Then imgui come and say, well what if UIs didn’t have state at all. Ooh this is nice, but kind of hard on the cpu, so what do we do?
Well, perhaps one of the biggest reason for the success of web apps is in fact that the dom didn’t impose a way to bind data to its view. And so we may be doomed to framework hell.
- leeoniya 1 week ago> The react model - where you just update the global state and re-render everything - is slower but easier on the brain. The signals model is faster, but so much effort.
there are multiple frameworks now that do fine-grained diffing without relying on signals, proxies, or any other reactive primitives. they basically have the top-down react model but much faster and without the weird concepts like hooks and manual/wasteful dependency arrays.
my favorite one is ivi-js: https://github.com/localvoid/ivi
it's just 8% slower than the fastest / ugliest / imperative / unmaintainable vanilla js you can eventually arrive at if all you care about is winning benchmarks.
https://krausest.github.io/js-framework-benchmark/2025/table...
- localvoid 1 week agoJust want to add that even though ivi is using tagged templates, I am strongly against using tagged templates to describe UIs as a Web Standard.
One of the most useful features that could make a lot of incremental computation problems easier is "value types"[1], but unfortunately it seems that isn't going to happen anytime soon. The biggest constraint when developing an efficient UI framework with good DX is JavaScript. Also, it would be nice to have `Node.prototype.insertAfter()` :)
- leeoniya 1 week ago> The biggest constraint when developing an efficient UI framework with good DX is JavaScript.
for perf, s/JavaScript/DOM, i think.
good DX comes from ecosystem and amount of time invested in making good tooling. JSX would be a non-starter without IDEs helping autocomplete, linting/format, syntax coloring, and webpack/babel to do the compilation.
tagged templates could reach at least the same level of DX as JSX if the community invested the resources to make that better. i'm not saying it's the right solution for a standard, but it would be way better than jsx, since tagged templates are already a standard.
- leeoniya 1 week ago
- localvoid 1 week ago
- dragonwriter 1 week ago> Microsoft tried (and failed) at defining a ton of models, MVC, MVP, MVVM, and what not,
Microsoft used those at various times, but the only one it defined was MVVM.
MVC was Xerox PARC, MVP was Taligent.
- jraph 1 week ago> The react model - where you just update the global state and re-render everything - is slower but easier on the brain.
I would gladly take easier on our hardware, bandwidth and planet even if a bit harder on the developers' brains. (as a developer).
> Most apps out there don’t need to be crazy fast
I wish we recognized that we need apps to be lean.
> and people will choose react because it’s just simpler.
I think you are right, and I dislike React for this.
- leeoniya 1 week ago
- segphault 1 week agoInstead of adopting JSX, I would really like the syntax for this to be more like the way Kotlin uses receivers and builders to provide a generalized syntax for DSLs that happens to be good for describing component hierarchies. It would be broadly useful far beyond just HTML templating, it would also be great for expressing configurations and all kinds of other things.
The actual semantics for templating and data binding could just be a set of standard functions that use those syntactic feature, much like what you see in Jetpack Compose.
- BiteCode_dev 1 week agoYou don't even need much: loops, conditionals on attributes, and conditionals on nodes.
In fact, we could have that cross-language.
- BiteCode_dev 1 week ago
- jlukic 1 week agoIt’s worth noting this was written by maybe the person with the most experience in the space i can think of—-the primary author of Lit / Polymer working at web components on Google and contributing on many core DOM specs that have become part of the web platform.
- troupo 1 week ago> It’s worth noting this was written by
by one of the people wrecklessly barging forward with half-baked specs that introduced significantly more problems than they solved, pushed a "solution" that requires 20+ new web specs to barely do all the things user-space is already doing while completely ignoring and gaslighting anyone who wasn't 100% on board with what they were doing.
Safari argued that there should be a declarative ways for this 15 years ago
- gwd 1 week ago> wrecklessly
<pedantic>
It's "recklessly". "reck" is a very old word meaning "to care, heed, have a mind, be concerned about"; so "reckless" means "without taking heed".
I actually thought it was directly related to "reckon" (meaning "to think or calculate"), but when I looked it up it turned out not to be the case (except much further back in the etymological tree).
</pedantic>
- troupo 1 week agoAs I get older my brain and my fingers get more and more divorced from each other :)
My brain knows it "reckless", my fingers type "wreckless". Same happens to a few other words, too.
- troupo 1 week ago
- JimDabell 1 week agoWeb components were such a big disappointment. 200% the complexity for 20% of the functionality. Everything coming out of that area seems to be hideously over-engineered while failing to solve the problems people wanted them to.
My feeling is that they were focused on designing something that is aimed at building form controls, not the kinds of components web developers use in practice. They are designed to make browser vendors’ lives easier, not web developers. That’s often excused with “web components excel at ‘leaf‘ components” when what is actually meant is “web components are bad at everything else”.
I would expect an actually good solution that fits in with the web’s architecture to come from the direction of HTMX, not web components.
> Safari argued that there should be a declarative ways for this 15 years ago
True, but they were equally able to propose and deploy alternative solutions and mostly just went along with web components (with exceptions of course).
- troupo 1 week ago> True, but they were equally able to propose and deploy alternative solutions and mostly just went along with web components (with exceptions of course).
Safari doesn't have as many engineers (a shame) and definitely doesn't have as many people whose apparent job is just to sit on standards committees and generate specs (like Alex Russel, Justin Fangnani etc.).
They did end up proposing declarative template instantiation in 2017: https://github.com/WICG/webcomponents/blob/gh-pages/proposal... but that mostly went nowhere
- lenkite 6 days agoIt should have been possible to declare and use simple web-components - which use a template and a CSS class - without any Javascript.
- _benton 6 days agoIm not sure what you're referring to, they seem pretty straightforward to me. Create a class that extends HTMLElement, implement stuff in connectedCallback and attributeChangedCallback. Return a list of attributes in static observedAttributes. Or use some extended class if you want, there are plenty and they're easy to create your own.
- troupo 1 week ago
- _benton 6 days agoWhat were these 20 new specs?
- troupo 6 days agoAfter multiple specs had already been pushed through, they finally decided to write down a list of what is still needed.
22 items: https://w3c.github.io/webcomponents-cg/2022.html
In those things like ARIA are not a single spec. It's now close to five different proposals and a huge ARIA Object Model proposal.
Similar thing with Form Associated Controls: it's not one spec. It's a bunch of specs fixing idiotic issues like this: https://github.com/WICG/webcomponents/issues/814
Note: easily half of these only exist because of web components and for web components. Literally nothing else has these issues.
- troupo 6 days ago
- gwd 1 week ago
- troupo 1 week ago
- upghost 1 week agoIs there anyone else who feels kinda like declarative templating is actually kind of worse than jQuery? Don't get me wrong, I've been using React for nearly a decade. But the more complex my SPAs become, the more I wish I had imperative control of the DOM.
I think the reason is because the DOM is a leaky abstraction and at some level I would just prefer last write wins.
I realize declarative templating is supposed to handle that, but this starts to break down really quickly when you share mutable state between components.
- parhamn 1 week agoI think part of this is React folks think its a cardinal sin to invoke the dom apis directly. Sometimes it's just fine to capture a ref (and dare I say, query a component by a id) and do the work directly. In fact this is what most libraries that are "fast" and low-rerenders do (like the form ones).
- bapak 1 week agoI don’t like React but I disagree with this sentiment. First of all you can already opt out of declarative DOM and knock yourself out with innerHTML and ref.
Second, what can you do with imperative control of the DOM that is less practical with the declarative one? I can only think of certain methods (attachShadow(), showModal()) but even then you're a 10-line component away from making it declarative.
- wackget 1 week agoAbsolutely. I've yet to see a single example which has convinced me that React (etc.) is remotely preferable to writing separate HTML and jQuery.
- parhamn 1 week ago
- llcooliovice 1 week ago> We've explored the reactivity landscape. While early DOM templating proposals didn't include updating, userland systems have thoroughly explored the landscape by now, and discovered good mental models and better and worse implementation approaches. I think we can now zero-in on a system that combines the best features from the different approaches.
AFAIK Ryan Carniato/Solid JS is still exploring what’s possible with signals. I don’t think userland exploration of this space has entirely finished, and further innovation may be possible.
- localvoid 1 week agoThere is a lot of interesting research outside of the webdev bubble in the incremental computation problem space, and self-adjusting computations (signals) aren't even that interesting.
- localvoid 1 week ago
- vlucas 1 week agoI like the spirit here, but I would argue we need a few lower level APIs built into browsers first instead.
It will be near impossible to get everyone to agree on a standard template system. What the browser CAN do, however, is provide some lower level APIs on how to apply diffs to the DOM in a performant native way.
I would LOVE for something like this to exist in browsers natively:
element.applyDiff(DocumentFragment | string, { method: 'innerHTML' | 'outerHTML' })
This could apply the diff in a way that would be non-disruptive, i.e. it would keep element focus, input values, states in audio and video players, mutate attributes, etc. There are JavaScript libraries that do this like Idiomorph, but a native solution has the potential to be much more performant.
- MrJohz 1 week agoThe article does link to the DOM part proposal, which would be one useful low-level API. It wouldn't work so well for VDOM-based frameworks, but for other frameworks it could simplify how they work and provide additional room for optimisations. It would also be useful for projects without a framework, particularly if the signals proposal was also adopted.
- MrJohz 1 week ago
- llcooliovice 1 week ago> If the Records and Tuples proposal were progressing, JSX could maybe create Records with boxes, but that proposal has been stalled, especially on the record identity and box parts that would make it suitable for a JSX semantics.
That proposal hasn’t just stalled, it’s been withdrawn. https://github.com/tc39/proposal-record-tuple/issues/394
It has been replaced by https://github.com/tc39/proposal-composites
- wavemode 1 week agoI would argue that the proliferation of frontend frameworks is evidence is that we -don't- know what the optimal abstraction is for building frontend applications. We're all still trying to figure that out.
Just look at what happened with Web Components. It didn't take over or become the foundation of everyone's software. It just became yet another competitor [0].
I wish the standards committees would focus their efforts on improving JavaScript the language. That has a much greater and more lasting return on investment.
- jdkoeck 1 week agoIs there really a proliferation? At this point it’s 90% React.
- branko_d 1 week agoI would love to see Web platform become more similar to JVM or .NET CLR - just a bytecode JIT with access to rich layout/rendering engine. Then build whatever you want on top of it.
- nine_k 1 week agoDOM + CSS is a hugely rich layout / rendering engine. The problem is that it's heavyweight.
- nine_k 1 week ago
- jdkoeck 1 week ago
- rs186 1 week agoThe author was a core contributor of Google's Lit project: https://github.com/lit/lit
- mock-possum 1 week agoLit my beloved
God I love lithtml’s tagged template literals so much more than react’s JSX or Vue’s 3-in-one thing. It’s just html, in strings, in JavaScript. Lit is just a way to make custom elements easier. Man it’s gonna suck when I have to move on from my current gig and get my hands dirty with react again.
- troupo 1 week ago> It’s just html, in strings, in JavaScript.
It's not. It's a custom HTML-like syntax with lots of custom and weird rules.
- unlog 1 week agoYep, `lit` is contaminating the browser API with their ideas just because their group of people writes the code for the browsers. They should be competing from the outside. Instead of pushing this kind of apis that only fit their mental models.
- yoz-y 1 week agoIt’s similar enough to html that anybody familiar with html and JS can pick it up. Quirks it has, but I like that using it mostly just feels like building a huge html string.
- unlog 1 week ago
- troupo 1 week ago
- mock-possum 1 week ago
- notnullorvoid 1 week agoThis is exactly the kind of high-level feature we need to stop putting standardisation efforts towards, and focus instead on low-level features that provide value for high-level user land abstractions.
There is no value this provides over making a tagged template function and exposing it as a library. If that library is stable with ubiquitous adoption for 5-10 years then maybe there's something to talk about.
- aatd86 1 week agoI don't quite understand. The DOM is/needs a functional API. Why bolt another DSL on top?
Now you have to find a way for javascript to interact with your template language.
While functions are sufficient. That doesn't look like orthogonal language design.
- troupo 1 week ago> I don't quite understand. The DOM is/needs a functional API. Why bolt another DSL on top?
There are no parts of DOM APIs that are functional. It's all 90s-era Java OOP-style.
- aatd86 1 week agofunctional in the sense that it uses method calls on objects and javascript has higher order functions. It is a spectrum. I know DOM nodes are objects that use inheritance but I also know javascript is not deemed a "traditional" functional PL of course.
- troupo 1 week agoJavascript being a decent functional language does not make DOM API functional.
DOM API is 90-s era OOP
- troupo 1 week ago
- aatd86 1 week ago
- austin-cheney 1 week agoPeople want this because JSX is all they are capable of.
One reason why things like this have never happened before is because the people who need this are only barely capable of working with HTML. The DOM supports a wide variety of technologies far outside and unrelated to HTML.
- troupo 1 week ago
- llcooliovice 1 week agoThere is still innovation happening in frameworks. I do wonder if it is too early to start adding things like this to the browser. Web components landed way too early and now we’re stuck with them.
- llcooliovice 1 week ago> There's no fundamental templating knowledge that's portable between stacks, and native DOM creation APIs like innerHTML are unsafe by default.
setHTML() is already implemented in Chrome/Edge and Firefox so this point is a bit outdated - there is a safe alternative to innerHTML.
- infensus 1 week agoMDN and caniuse say otherwise. I think there might've been an older specification that got implemented, but it's been revised since
- llcooliovice 1 week agoChrome implemented a prototype, then the spec changed and they removed it, then they implemented the new version. I should have been clearer and said Chrome Canary and Firefox Nightly. Not sure when it will reach stable but probably some point this year, they’ve been working on it for ages and Safari is onboard.
- llcooliovice 1 week ago
- infensus 1 week ago
- stevage 1 week agoWhat exactly is the problem with having the higher levels of web development supported through libraries (React, Vue etc) rather than directly in the browser? Why does this need to happen?
- mock-possum 1 week agoFTA, which I agree with:
> Developers need to reach for a library, and thus tools like npm or a CDN, to do many basic things. This adds to the overhead of getting started. It makes simple static files and devtools less useful than they could be. There's no fundamental templating knowledge that's portable between stacks, and native DOM creation APIs like innerHTML are unsafe by default.
Remember when you could just drag an html file into your browser, and it would work? No build step, no package install, no web server, just vanilla html+css+javascript?
It would be nice to get to do that again, and the more we move things like .querySelector out of libraries like jQuery and into native browser APIs the better, imo.
That should ideally be the highest calling of frameworks like Lit and packages like Lodash - to be so good that they prove indispensable, and ultimately go native.
- bapak 1 week ago> It would be nice to get to do that again
The answer to this is both "never gonna happen" and "you already can."
You already can ship a React app in pure JS and even import modules via ESM in the browser from CDN. Performance will suck but you can.
You'll never be able to actually have a complex web app that you can just drag into the browser. As the base API expands, so do the ambitions.
Heck we've had PHP 4 years after HTML just to fill in some blanks, people will always want more than static code.
- bapak 1 week ago
- mock-possum 1 week ago
- mosdl 1 week agoI miss mozilla's XUL language (and XBL!), those were awesome.
- latortuga 1 week agoSeems like a comment comes up about XUL every few years and I can't help but be sniped by it. A xulrunner app was my first job out of college in '08, good memories, fun dev environment!
- sabellito 1 week agoMy company, me as a solo dev, back in 2003-04 built a "single page app" using XUL and iframes. Still has some 200 monthly users, the poor bastards. They have to download Firefox 3.6 iirc, and it only works in an 800x600 window.
XUL was beastly back then though.
- Nextgrid 1 week ago> Still has some 200 monthly users, the poor bastards. They have to download Firefox 3.6 iirc, and it only works in an 800x600 window.
Out of curiosity, what does that app do to convince people to jump through such hoops? Would you mind sending a link to it?
- sabellito 1 week agoIt's a full management app for recruiting companies.
There are still 3 companies that use it (since 2008), so their employees don't have a choice really. The app does a lot, so to stop using it the companies would need to hire and migrate to 3-4 other services. I reckon SAP and the kind could do everything as well, but these companies are too small for that.
There isn't a website or anything anymore for me to show, and I haven't been involved in it for over 10 years.
- mosdl 1 week agoQuite common, lots of old software that is custom written lives on, be it java apps, old vb stuff, etc
- sabellito 1 week ago
- Nextgrid 1 week ago
- watersb 1 week agothere-is-only-XUL
- paulrouget 1 week agoThere is no data!
https://www.mozilla.org/keymaster/gatekeeper/there.is.only.x...
Good old time.
- paulrouget 1 week ago
- latortuga 1 week ago
- ericyd 1 week ago> React doesn't provide a way to explicitly bind to properties and events of DOM elements, or provide directives that apply to an element.
I didn't understand this part, can anyone shed light? What is different between what's being described here and what React does with event listeners, etc?
- krebby 1 week agoI think this is referring to the fact that React uses synthetic event listeners - it's cheaper to bind an event listener once at the root and do your own element matching than it is to continuously bind and unbind listeners.
https://react.dev/reference/react-dom/components/common#reac...
- bevr1337 1 week ago> React doesn't provide a way to explicitly bind to properties and events of DOM elements
We can nitpick this point because react has had a ref API for at least 5 years now. Given a ref, all DOM API are available. For events, SyntheticEvent will refer to a native event if it exists.
The SyntheticEvent abstracts vendor discrepancy. Under the hood, react can apply some optimization too.
https://legacy.reactjs.org/docs/events.htmlhttps://react.dev/reference/react-dom/components/common#reac...
- MrJohz 1 week agoThe synthetic event also adds its own abstractions though. For example, the `onChange` handler in React behaves very differently to the native DOM `change` event.
- bevr1337 1 week agoAnd then some. Switching to react-native or other render targets can also be a doozy. Hopefully the references clarify all the features.
- bevr1337 1 week ago
- MrJohz 1 week ago
- krebby 1 week ago
- jongjong 1 week agoYes, it's weird that Browsers were so fast to ship CSP rules to prevent XSS attacks by limiting the use of inline scripts but so slow to ship a templating mechanism which would largely solve the problem.
It's like creating regulations which require a specific solution before that solution exists.
- llcooliovice 1 week ago> There are in-flight proposals for very low-level DOM update primitives, like DOM Parts, which target framework implementations, but I think higher-level APIs like full declarative templating can take even more load off, help prove out and complete the lower-level API proposals, and be really impactful for developers and users.
There is an alternative suggestion to DOM parts which might be a better bet: https://github.com/whatwg/dom/issues/736
- ukuina 1 week agoNit: The post keeps referring to "standard JSX" as though trying to will such a thing into existence.
- jmull 1 week agoI thought one of the main points the article is making about JSX is that it currently isn’t standardized.
- jmull 1 week ago
- codedokode 1 week agoThe web platform is over bloated. The proper solution would be a minimum set of APIs and set of reusable by many sites JS/Wasm libraries.
For example, most of Web Audio (thing like filters and oscillators except for actually sending audio to audio card) could be implemented in Wasm making a browser simpler and not allowing to use it for fingerprinting. Also, base64 encoding/decoding, URL handling function, most of canvas code etc. Imagine how less work for browser developer it would be.
- yoz-y 1 week agoI think web needs an “actually standard” library. Something that vendors could ship with browsers but could be also updated to higher version of a site requires it (and cached forever).
That would allow us to not download a bunch of code every time.
- yoz-y 1 week ago
- austin-cheney 1 week agoDOM templating is just like JavaScript classes. Classes in JavaScript were requested since the earliest of times and always rejected until ES6 (2014), because they are/were:
* always unnecessary
* always artificial
* only vanity
* only desired by insecure persons not familiar in the technology
* only qualified as bad idea but necessary because people were just going to do it anyways
So far the DOM has managed to escape this stupidity only because it is not a part of JavaScript. Java people ignorant of JavaScript desirous of features to make JavaScript feel more like Java has no bearing on the DOM, for example, because they are separate technologies managed by unrelated organizations.
None of the ergonomic reasoning mentioned in the article are qualified. Just because many people lack confidence in the technology and knowingly make poor design decisions doesn’t mean a familiar vanity layer will fix anything. Declarative comfort, for example, is not a resolution to performance and security problems just because other knowingly bad design decisions are worse. Two wrongs don’t make a right.
Furthermore the DOM already has a slow unnecessary declarative abstraction layer insecure people cannot live without called querySelectors. In other words this proposal is to React as querySelectors are to jquery, and classes are to Java. These are/were trends and trends die over time. We really should move past vanity as an alternative to an absence of training.
- 9rx 1 week agoIt is slightly different. Classes ended up being worse than what they were trying to supplement. Templating, if done right at least (a big if, granted), can bring small improvement. If classes were better, we wouldn't see them the same way now.
- owebmaster 6 days agoHow classes could be better? I don't think it's missing something that would make me use it
- owebmaster 6 days ago
- yoz-y 1 week agoI’m curious. What is actually wrong with querySelector?
- austin-cheney 1 week agoString interpolation is so ridiculously slow. Epic slow.
Perhaps just as importantly is that is a crutch for many to avoid accessing the DOM in steps. You can read from the DOM with querySelectors but you cannot modify the DOM with them. If querySelectors is all you can do then you must use some third party template system because you have no idea how any of this works even though it provides maximal expressive freedom.
- yoz-y 6 days agoIs anything preventing JS from compiling the proper stepwise dom access if the querySelector parameter is a literal? That would basically push the interpolation into the parsing step.
- yoz-y 6 days ago
- austin-cheney 1 week ago
- 9rx 1 week ago
- hsn915 1 week agoWhat we need is not templating. What we need is a native implementation of a virtual dom.
More specifically, a native implementation of the "patch" function:
Where `virtual_dom` is just a plain-data description of the DOM.patch(target_dom_node, virtual_dom)
Most of the "slowness" of the DOM come from its requirement to be a 90's era Java style object hierarchy.
Don't call it "templating". Just call it "virtual dom". Everyone knows what that means.
- ethan_smith 1 week agoA native virtual DOM implementation would also drastically reduce memory overhead since browser engines could optimize diffing algorithms at the C++ level instead of requiring megabytes of JavaScript framework code to be downloaded, parsed and executed on every page load.
- silverwind 1 week agoVirtual DOM is a useless abstraction, there are numerous libs that perform fine without it.
- nine_k 1 week agoIt's a useful abstraction: you just build the full DOM with every change, a bit like a game engine. It makes so many things simpler.
It's not a free abstraction though.
- nine_k 1 week ago
- sethaurus 1 week agoOther than quibbling over the word "template", how does that differ from what TFA is describing?
- hsn915 1 week agoThe linked proposal has many "features" that would be "needed" if you frame the problem in terms of a "template api", centered around "binding" variables, and what not.
https://github.com/WICG/webcomponents/issues/1069
My proposal only adds one native function with nothing else: no new data types, no new apis.
- WickyNilliams 1 week agoDoesn't your proposal implicitly introduce the concept of a virtual DOM, which the browser does not have?
You'd need to spec out what that looks like. It adds one new API from the users perspective but much more from the browsers perspective.
Additionally the next generation of Frameworks do not use virtual DOM. Solid and svelte do not. Vue is moving away from it. Signals are directionally where they're all heading.
- WickyNilliams 1 week ago
- hsn915 1 week ago
- ethan_smith 1 week ago
- PaulHoule 1 week agoWhat about
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Reference/...
?
The next two documents are part of a set that I made which did DOM-based templating on the back end in Java
https://ontology2.com/the-book/html5-the-official-document-l...
https://ontology2.com/the-book/source-code-transclusion-in-h...
one trouble is that systems that work at the DOM tree level are an order or two magnitudes slower than string-based templating systems. Hypothetically you could do some interesting things like hygenic macros and merge together arbitrary documents, rewriting the CSS classes and such. But by and large people find string-based templates to be good enough and don't way to pay the price for something more expensive.
- WorldMaker 1 week agoCurrently <slot>s only have automatic behavior when attaching a <template> to the Shadow DOM to a node with existing "Light" DOM children, which mostly only happens with Web Components (and for now Web Components require JS).
So it is not yet a full, generic templating solution.
Also, this article goes on at length about how the templating needs to be "reactive" and not just "builds a DOM tree", and <slot> doesn't do that yet at all, even in the automatic behavior scenarios, it's a one time "merge".
Kicking the can along the road of the complexity of "reactive" components is a large part of how we've got the (quite basic) <template> and <slot> tags that we got, and I think why the article is still currently impractical. There needs to be more agreement on what "reactive" means. The article mentions the signals proposal, and that's one possibility that a lot of frameworks are pushing for right now, but it's still a process before browsers agree to support something like that, and something like that is a dependency before agreeing on what a "reactive" template language can be/how it would work out of the box.
- WorldMaker 1 week ago
- bravesoul2 1 week agoDepends where the platform boundary is for Web. As much as we hate JS fatigues and so many frameworks, choice is good. Maybe if the browser can make it easy for these frameworks to be performant and integrate more deeply (not part of the JS bundle but more like a deeper JS 'plugin' with bonus of sometimes having a cache hit from another site) we could just carry on using React et. al.
- bevr1337 1 week agoAs mentioned, the DOM API is a stinker. Does this address that root issue?
I'd love to see something that builds on the work of hyperscript and HAST. They are great models of the DOM. It would be exciting if a template language were syntax sugar.
JSX is easy to reason about because its elements are 1:1 with a single, uniform function call. That feature means JSX is always optional. Sometimes it is even more verbose or less-performant to use JSX than a hyperscript API like specifying optional properties. I think errors and call stacks are clearer than during string interpolation, but that's possibly BS.
Web components offer limited data binding and the hyperscript approach has clear control flow. The templates seem to be a source of confusion in the GH discussions.
There is still something special and pleasant about jquery because its API was a reflection of the domain. As a developer, I want to query for a node (CSS selector, xpath, etc.) to affect change and traverse to other nodes. After a beer or two I'm convinced emacs and org mode approaches are worth emulating in the web.
Great article and linked discussions. Thanks for sharing.
- TheRealPomax 1 week ago> This kind of templating is the cornerstone of all modern web frameworks and rendering libraries these days, all of which let you declaratively combine markup with data
Okay but just because fighting the river has become popular doesn't mean wanting to pave over the river is a good idea. It might be the logical _conclusion_ to fighting the river, but you could also just... stop fighting the river and use it the way it was intended to be used again.
- ulrischa 1 week agoThe answer is here on the HN Start-page: XSLT
- halis 6 days agoI would like to posit that it’s actually JSX that people like and not React. JSX was always the friend that she told you not to worry about.
- Sophistifunk 1 week agoWhen are we done adding everything into the browser API?
- wewewedxfgdf 1 week agoHopefully never.
Unless you loved IE6 of course, which was when Microsoft declared the web browser to be 'complete'.
- lylejantzi3rd 1 week agoWhen somebody creates something better.
- wewewedxfgdf 1 week ago
- nitwit005 1 week agoIf you built React into the web platform, what I'd expect is everyone would stop using it the moment a big new version of React came out, and it'd eventually get deprecated and removed.
There has been long running complaints about how many UI frameworks there are, and how often they change. It's settled down some, but I don't expect that situation to change for a long while.
- owebmaster 6 days ago> If you built React into the web platform, what I'd expect is everyone would stop using it the moment a big new version of React came out, and it'd eventually get deprecated and removed
Not related to the templating thing but I have the impression we are witnessing the last React big change with RSC. This change made them lose a good % of developers, a next one would kill it.
- nitwit005 3 days agoGo to the what's new page for a react release, and there's quite a bit, with minor releases then adding to that: https://react.dev/blog/2024/12/05/react-19#whats-new-in-reac...
After several releases, it's a lot.
- nitwit005 3 days ago
- owebmaster 6 days ago
- insin 1 week agoWe'd need a good API for UI components to go with it
- tcoff91 1 week agoStop adding more complexity to the browser and making it even more impossible to build a new browser from scratch.
- wg0 1 week agoNeed a DOM snapshot API too.
- djfivyvusn 1 week agoWhere's the code?
- exclipy 1 week ago
- exclipy 1 week ago
- hackrmn 1 week agoI disagree on the general principle of adding APIs -- the platform suffers not from lack of APIs, when you really think about it, but from "another API to rule them all". It's frankly a similar fallacy that struck Microsoft where they were for a long time stuck having to support every API their seniors and interns ever invented -- none of which seem to be sufficient, apparently.
The solution to the "bro, just one more API, please" is to design a _transparent_ platform that is well able to "delegate" programming of new features (e.g. one implementing your favourite templating API) to third-parties in a manner that maintains their "first class citizen" status. WebAssembly was a move in that direction because it's a generic platform that in part supercedes and otherwise supplants the mess that JavaScript has to manage bridging the originally "kiddie script" application software domain, with the native functionality the browser may be encapsulating (also for performance).
Case in point: FFMpeg may be compiled to a WebAssembly module, which gives you arbitrary video/audio encoding/decoding -- pending correct design of bit-blitting so the decoded output can be efficiently transferred to the screen/speakers (which, for much of the reasons I am trying to outline, _is_ the bottleneck of the entire solution).
We need more of the same kind of thinking. Stop begging Web browser vendors / w3C / WHATWG for more features that are just lipstick on a pig -- sit down, think about what kind of feature(s) would allow the Web platform to finally escape the death spiral it's been in since its inception -- albeit one with a large enough radius it's meant to never actually resemble a spiral.
I don't know if I am making myself clear here, but in much simpler terms: why should there be another piece of code that caters to "most" (because you happen to be a FP/React zealot, for better or for worse) when these people can ostensibly write such templating system themselves, publish it on e.g. NPM and/or pull it and use it from there?
- keepamovin 1 week agoThe time has been right for Yonkers -
- b0a04gl 1 week ago[dead]
- karolinepauls 1 week ago[dead]
- lofaszvanitt 1 week agoFisrt include jQuery as a whole into the base standard. That would help a lot.
- bravesoul2 1 week agoOut of FE for a whole but isn't that done to a great extent.
- lofaszvanitt 1 week agodone, how?
- bravesoul2 1 week ago
- bravesoul2 1 week ago
- lofaszvanitt 1 week ago
- edoceo 1 week agoI <3 jQuery but, no.
- lofaszvanitt 1 week agoWhat no? Why can't we have nice things, like concise, easy to remember, not overly elaborate syntax?
- ameliaquining 1 week agojQuery is large and contains a lot of things. Which specific features do you think the DOM needs?
- ameliaquining 1 week ago
- lofaszvanitt 1 week ago
- bravesoul2 1 week ago
- quantadev 1 week agoTemplates are great until they need to be dynamic. Then you're right back to the current situation where frameworks like React are just the better way.
In fact, you could call JSX a "Dynamic Templating System" and that's a reasonable summary of what it is (in addition to other things of course).
There might be some ways that React itself could, internally, notice the special cases and special times where it _could_ be slightly more performant from using a lower level of templating, as an optimization, but I'd certainly prefer that to be abstracted away and buried deep inside React, rather than ever having to think about it myself, at the JSX layer.
Someone can let me know if React is already leveraging this for browsers that support it, I didn't research that.
- Gualdrapo 1 week ago"If I could wave my magic wand..." at least 2 of 3 of the changes I'd made about the way frontend web is developed, would be about `<template>`s:
1. Making it possible to do something like <template src="..."> and being able to load them from an external source
2. Making them "dynamic"
3 (and the most controversial one) that all CSS, HTML and Javascript (if you don't hate it) could be written natively like QML - one syntax to rule them all.
- quantadev 1 week agoAs a web dev you probably already know but #1 is slightly similar to `Web Components` but you're right we cannot load a web component right in the HTML where we use it. It makes sense though because if you use an Element in multiple places it wouldn't make sense to have 'src' in multiple places, so ultimately some kind of 'loading' at the top of the page is needed, and that's how WebComponents work, but I still like how you think.
#3 is a tricky one syntactically because HTML needs to be used by mere mortals and JS is a programming language used by us gods, so unifying all three would br tricky, but again I agree with you that would be awesome. Maybe some flavor of LISP would be both "powerful like a language" and "easy like a document".
- lelanthran 1 week ago> 1. Making it possible to do something like <template src="..."> and being able to load them from an external source
I've done that, requires no build step/npm/whatever. It was posted on HN for discussion a week ago: https://github.com/lelanthran/ZjsComponent
- quantadev 1 week ago
- rictic 1 week agoThe system described in the article is very React-like, and could be used by future versions of React. In both, functions return a description of HTML to render, which can be applied either to create new HTML or to update previously rendered HTML.
- nwienert 1 week agoI skimmed part of it, but unless I missed some huge caveat I think you’re backwards and GP is definitely right. The article mentions React, then sort of dismisses it later saying the other two strategies are better to implement instead of diffing.
I don’t see any reason a browser level “here’s new DOM you diff and apply it” couldn't exist and be a huge win for React and other libraries, with React so much more popular than every other framework combined, and that being a pretty low level API, it makes sense to start there.
Building the overly abstracted thing first is a mistake web API authors have made too many times (see web components).
- quantadev 1 week agoI still have hope for Web Components to take off in the figure. I'm a React dev so I don't "need" them, but they may end up being some kind of capability that React can secretly, quietly embed into React core as some kind of optimization if that ever makes sense. Web Components is a great idea, but like I said it's just not quite as convenient as React, so it's currently somewhat irrelevant at least for me.
- quantadev 1 week ago
- nwienert 1 week ago
- Gualdrapo 1 week ago