Javascript is a scripting language without native module support. That isn't Webpack's fault.
Webpack also handles much, much more than just Javascript. It handles CSS, HTML, images, files, pretty much any kind of asset. Java/Scala doesn't have anything like that. Asset management is completely different due to the nature of how assets are transferred to the client.
And Android? Give me a break. The moment you stray from the strict layout of an Android app you run into a wall and have to learn how Gradle operates. This strict layout is good for some but others hate when an environment forces particular constraints upon them.
Webpack is completely configurable at every stage, works with plugins (which compilers don't do) and again, isn't magic. Not knowing how something works doesn't make it magic. That's not what magic means with respect to code.
Besides... Maybe if you just like getting by, you can program in C/Java/etc without learning about compilers. Web dev is fucked and transpiler knowledge is basically required, but sure you can get by in other domains without it. But if you want to be a good programmer, an expert at what you do, someone who lives and breathes and understands computer science, someone who will excel in his career and not remain a code monkey forever... You have to learn about how your compilers work just like you should know how the silicon in your computer is doing its own "magic".
Webpack also handles much, much more than just Javascript. It handles CSS, HTML, images, files, pretty much any kind of asset. Java/Scala doesn't have anything like that. Asset management is completely different due to the nature of how assets are transferred to the client.
And Android? Give me a break. The moment you stray from the strict layout of an Android app you run into a wall and have to learn how Gradle operates. This strict layout is good for some but others hate when an environment forces particular constraints upon them.
Webpack is completely configurable at every stage, works with plugins (which compilers don't do) and again, isn't magic. Not knowing how something works doesn't make it magic. That's not what magic means with respect to code.
Besides... Maybe if you just like getting by, you can program in C/Java/etc without learning about compilers. Web dev is fucked and transpiler knowledge is basically required, but sure you can get by in other domains without it. But if you want to be a good programmer, an expert at what you do, someone who lives and breathes and understands computer science, someone who will excel in his career and not remain a code monkey forever... You have to learn about how your compilers work just like you should know how the silicon in your computer is doing its own "magic".