10 things that developers love about JavaScript – and 10 things that don’t

Today it was 30 years ago, SGT. JavaScript taught the site to play. Well, not quite, but close enough. The programming language began in 1995 as a project in the depths of the Netscape browser manufacturer. This lavele under several different names, including Mocha and Livescript, before Finully emerged into a wilderness called JavaScript.

The aspirations were not great. People in Netscape suggested that the developer could tuck a little logic into the website to check some elements of the form or maybe something lightning. At that time, the website was a girl with text and simply contained a picture on the website considered sophisticated.

About three decades later, JavaScript dominates as a dominant way to deliver software to the end user. The website has turned into a web application with a little text, lots of images and even more software logic.

Along the way, JavaScript has grown faster, more elegant, more capable and well, much more complicated. Some love it. They play in the strength, sophistication and sophisticated infrastructure that allows us to solve so many world problems by just clicking or clicking.

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