![ReactとFluxでクライアントサイドの設計](https://cdn-ak-scissors.b.st-hatena.com/image/square/5f95a704eaa7da095591d2e22cdd52aad4252d7f/height=288;version=1;width=512/https%3A%2F%2Fkray.jp%2Fwp%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2015%2F11%2Fflux-diagram-white-background.png)
This blog site has been archived. Go to react.dev/blog to see the recent posts. We’ve made an entirely new version of the devtools, and we want you to try it out! Why entirely new? Perhaps the biggest reason was to create a defined API for dealing with internals, so that other tools could benefit as well and not have to depend on implementation details. This gives us more freedom to refactor thing
Moving Codecademy to ES6, Webpack, and React How we build our web-based learning interface March 18, 2015 When Codecademy was born in the summer of 2011, the natural choice for a frontend stack was Backbone + jQuery. Backbone was less than a year old and widely considered the state-of-the-art framework for creating frontend applications. Combined with jQuery, one could do a lot of novel things wit
A unified developer experience for software development Nuclide is built as a single package on top of Atom to provide hackability and the support of an active community. It provides a first-class development environment for React Native, Hack and Flow projects. Retiring the Nuclide Open Source Project A few years ago, we introduced Nuclide to provide a first-class IDE experience. We’ve made treme
Sometimes in software development, we take giant leaps. In 2003, Brad Fitzpatrick released Memcached, and began talking about LiveJournal’s architecture (here’s a presentation from a few years later.) This became the prototype for the next generation of sites and apps, and is still largely the same way web apps are built today. In 2004, Google published a paper describing MapReduce. With Google’s
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