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by zlg_codes 1035 days ago
It's taken me some time to digest the angle of your comment. Maybe my dig at CSS3's complexity was taken as a dig against CSS itself?

I've been practicing webdev since 1999 or so; I understand how useful CSS is and still remember the dark times of inline style attributes. :)

Making something on the Web is a bit strange due to needing to set up 3 different technologies, and line them up just so, and pray a future browser update doesn't mess up some logical assumption you made along the way.

It appears CSS classes are used somewhat like UI 'states', in a JS app. It's taken some time to adjust to using more logically meaningful class names instead of structurally meaningful that I used with regular non-JS webdev. Toggling a class somewhere sometimes requires doing other things in the UI, too. I've found lots of tiny little UI bugs as I develop and learn more about how things need to work in an event-based system.

As a result, I find I do not like this way of building things. Sure, it's cross-platform, because the browser-makers do all the heavy lifting. But Tcl/Tk is cross-platform. Allegro and wxWidgets and Qt are, too. Tkinter is a single `import` away. Each has its own challenges that get added on as a result of not relying on a multi-gigabyte-per-instance virtual machine, but software is all about trade-offs is it not?

Lesser used things aren't changed as often, for example. You can rely on them to not change so quickly. Compared to Mozilla or Google, who are competing for highest software version number and have a new release every 6 weeks.