Some weeks ago I stumble upon the concept of micro apps: apps that serve only one functionality/purpose, being minimal in most of the cases. And I question myself: if we have microservices and micro apps, it's only logical that we have micro libraries, right?
So, what do these libraries offer? You guessed it, one feature/functionality. The earliest moment I remember seeing one of these libraries, was the isX
libraries drama, where people claimed that JavaScript projects were becoming bloated because of the over-dependence on predicate function libraries, such as "is-number", for something as simple as asserting if a value is a number (is-number).
While I agree that these type of libraries contribute to bloatiness, building them can be quite satisfying, because:
- they are fast to build
- they are easy to maintain
- they integrate with ease
- you are challenged to build without external dependencies and for optimization
There's an additional rule for micro-libraries: what you build must be shipped through a single function. For JS/TS libraries, you can achieve this by exporting only that function in the main module file.
One big advantage of using micro-libraries, is that you get what you pay for. For example, if you only need feature X
from library Y
, why should you also depend on feature Z
, W
, A
, B
and C
that are bundled with Y
?
This was my motivation for building github-upsert
: a micro library for uploading/updating files in a GitHub repo.
I can now use this library on my Cloudflare Workers (that are limited to 1M bundle size) without depending on all the GitHub JS SDK features, just to update a file on my GitHub repo.
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