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by undersheet 2722 days ago
> cognitive load of tool options

First time I hear options are bad. Many options and competition lead to best products. There are enough posts and people who tell you what you should use.

Or just use npmtrends or npmcharts. 1 second later you know what is going on and what module you should pick.

Why are people criticizing something they have never used?

2 comments

My point here on this one is simply that it's investing to think about this factor. For beginners (which I am not), too many options can be confusing. That said, setting reasonable defaults for detail options so things work well without needing to configure then to start is a nice way around this. Deep options exist and can be adjusted as needed but a solid default configuration is set out of the box. "There are enough posts and people who tell you what you should use." -- sure but what if opinions very widely? There's the cognitive load or put another way friction-to-first-use.
who said that JS is for beginners?
Just to be clear - you don't think the author has ever used a tool with too many configuration options?