Manufact (YC S25) Is Hiring a Developer Advocate in SF
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React Context works. It's built-in, requires no dependencies, and handles many state management needs fine. It also causes the specific problem that leads developers to look for alternatives: unnecessary re-renders when the context value changes.For small amounts of global state — a theme preference, a user session — Context is fine. For anything with more frequent updates or more complex structure, Zustand is meaningfully better and the migration is straightforward.Here's the practical comparis
The Quest Begins (The "Why")Honestly, I was stuck in a loop of endless AJAX polling. Every few seconds my frontend would hammer the server with a GET request just to see if a new chat message had arrived. It felt like I was playing Whac‑A‑Mole with my own bandwidth—constantly chasing updates that rarely existed. Users complained about lag, my CPU spiked, and the whole thing smelled like a hackathon project that never quite shipped. One night, after yet another 3 a.m. debug session where I
Let’s face it: if your current frontend optimization strategy still involves manually auditing codebases for missing useMemo hooks, micro-managing dependency arrays, or aggressively fighting layout shifts with complex client-side state management, you are wasting your engineering leverage.As we cross the midpoint of 2026, web framework architecture has quietly undergone a massive shift. We have firmly moved out of the era of manual performance tweaking and entered the era of automated, compile-t
How react-i18next, react-intl, Tolgee, and LinguiJS compare for real projectsTL;DR. There's no single best React i18n library. For most teams an ICU-based option is the safer bet. react-intl is simple and safe for smaller codebases. Tolgee adds in-context editing and native namespaces, and scales well when localization quality matters. LinguiJS is great when you want a tiny runtime. react-i18next is the most popular with a huge ecosystem, but its custom format can cause platform-compatibility pa
Part 0: The Deep Breath — Why It's Not Just a Figure of Speech👦 Nephew: Uncle! Production is broken. Users are seeing the wrong order totals. I've been randomly changing code for twenty minutes and it's getting worse.👨‍🦳 Uncle: Stop. Close the editor. Take an actual breath.👦 Nephew: Uncle, this is not the time for meditation—👨‍🦳 Uncle: It's exactly the time. Here's what's happening in your brain right now, biologically: panic narrows your attention. You start pattern-matching to the last b
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A long chat between Uncle (front-end architect) and Nephew (excited, slightly overconfident, about to build "the next big thing"). Grab chai, this one's long. Part 0: The Trap Every Junior Falls Into👦 Nephew: Uncle! I'm starting a new React app today. Give me five minutes, I'll npx create-react-app and be coding by lunch.👨‍🦳 Uncle: Sit down. Before you write one line of code, answer me this — are you building a house, or are you building a table?👦 Nephew: ...What?👨‍🦳 Uncle: A table, you bui
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I'm a frontend developer with about three years of experience. Until a few months ago, "publish an npm package" lived on my someday list — the kind of thing you assume requires a deeper relationship with build tooling than you actually have. Then I built one. It's called daterly, it's a React date picker, and it's already running in internal projects at the company I work for.The twist: I wrote most of it with AI — specifically Claude Code and the wider Claude toolset. This is the honest version
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The problemEvery time I wanted to bolt an AI chatbot onto a React app, I hit the same wall: either I locked myself into one vendor's SDK (OpenAI's widget, Anthropic's whatever-they-ship), or I built the streaming UI, the theming, the floating launcher button, and the SSE parsing again, from scratch, for the third time this year.So I built react-agent-widget — a chat widget that doesn't care which LLM is on the other end.npm install react-agent-widget Quick start — 10 linesimport { Age
I have used Redis in production for years. In a previous role, our stack used Redis 6 on Azure Cache for Redis with a Spring Boot backend and Jedis. It worked, but advanced capabilities often came with extra decisions around cost, packaging, and service tier selection.Looking back, that tradeoff may also help explain some of the platform direction we are seeing now, including the move toward Azure Managed Redis and a clearer separation in positioning and capabilities.If we wanted richer search b
Unless you build it yourself there's no auto lang sync, change announcements, or focus managementImagine a language toggle on a website. The user clicks it, the content and UI swaps from English to French, it looks done but what's expected for accessibility? There are 3 aspects that need checking in this context. WCAG 3.1.1 (language of page) <html lang="">has to updateScreen readers use the lang attribute to choose a pronunciation engine. If it's stuck on en while the visible
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I've been building browser-based image tools for a while now, and color replacement is one of those features that seems simple on the surface but hides a lot of interesting problems. I want to write about the main one: why the obvious approach (RGB distance matching) fails on real photos, and how HSV fixes it. Plus some notes on shading preservation, edge detection, and where intelligent scissors fit in. Why RGB matching fails on photosWhen most developers implement "replace this color," th
Having a strong online presence isn’t just nice to have—it’s non-negotiable. Maybe you’re a student wanting to break into tech, a working professional eyeing a career change, or even an entrepreneur who needs to launch your own website. No matter your background, learning website development is one of the smartest moves you can make right now.If you’re looking for the best place to learn website development coaching in Noida, let’s talk about YRC Training Hub. The folks here don’t just cover tex
langdetect, langid, fasttext — all fine libraries. All have the same problem: they fail on short text, mixed-language input, and transliterated text. When your user submits a 6-word product review or a support ticket written half in English and half in their native language, accuracy drops fast.There's also the question of what you do with the detection result. Routing support tickets to the right team, serving the right content, auto-tagging user-generated content — these need a reliable signal
Most apps validate email with a regex. Some add an MX record check. Both are necessary — neither is sufficient.Here's what you're missing: an email address can be syntactically valid, have proper MX records, and still be completely useless. It might be a disposable inbox that expires in 10 minutes, a catch-all address that accepts everything but nobody reads, or [email protected] — a role account that goes to a shared inbox and gets marked as spam on arrival.The gap between "this address exi
You'd think validating a phone number is trivial. Regex, right? Something like ^\+?[0-9]{7,15}$ and you're done.Then your users start entering numbers like +1 (800) 555‑0199, 07911 123456, +49 (0) 30 1234567, or just 8 800 555 35 35. Your regex passes all of them. Your SMS provider rejects half.The real problem isn't format — it's that phone number rules are different in every country, change when telecoms merge, and a valid-looking number can still be a VoIP burner that will never receive an SM