In practice that's not going to happen, though. People will add their npm dependencies and move on, and instead of solving JS dependency hell Deno will become a layer of abstraction on top of it.
A lot of us were hoping Deno would do the Gopher thing and force a complete reset. Yes, that means less/slower adoption, but it means that when you pick up a Deno library you know you're not getting all of npm with it. The further we move along the less likely it seems that any Deno project will be able to be npm-free.
A lot of us were hoping Deno would do the Gopher thing and force a complete reset. Yes, that means less/slower adoption, but it means that when you pick up a Deno library you know you're not getting all of npm with it. The further we move along the less likely it seems that any Deno project will be able to be npm-free.