Average node.js app is slow. It requires godlike understanding/experience to make JS perform well. That why you see people re-writing JS to rust and go and zig, for example SWC, turbopack, esbuild and rome. For most use cases JS is plenty fast but average go code will be faster and easier to maintain.
As I am getting older, I do not want to spend my weekend learning about new features in next.js v13[1]or rewriting tests from enzyme to RTL[2]. I want to use programming language that value its users time and focus on developer experience.
As I am getting older, I do not want to spend my weekend learning about new features in next.js v13[1]or rewriting tests from enzyme to RTL[2]. I want to use programming language that value its users time and focus on developer experience.
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_w0Ikk4JY7U [2] https://dev.to/wojtekmaj/enzyme-is-dead-now-what-ekl