Introduction
So like most 2020 developers I used to give 0 fucks about bundlers...
I mean react/next/svelte takes care of it for us right
but then, I started doing this course called threejs journey by brunosimon in which bruno makes us understand why bundlers are important
TL;DR helps client import node_modules files that are stored on the server
WebPack
The world's most popular javascript bundler "webpack" has a bunch of disadvantages
- It is pretty complex, for context and it took me 2 days to understand and be able to configure webpack on my own
- It is kinda really slow cuz it rebuilds and rebundles the files for every change [especially if you want to use typescript]
Here's Recordings of WebPack
Time to Initial Load: 35s
Time to Load Changes: 20s
Enter Snowpack
Snowpackjs has a fundamentally different approach to bundling...
It builds each file and caches it for future use, while webpack rebuilds and rebundles every single time
Bonus
Snowpack is super easy to configure
here's the config I used in the below test
module.exports = {
mount: {
src: { url: "/" },
public: { url: "/", static: true },
},
};
it mounts files in src, public dir to "/" (root directory of served content)
Here's Recordings of Snowpack
Time to Initial Load: 20s
Time to Load Changes: 14ms π±
Thanks
if you β€οΈ this blog post... I'd β€οΈ to tell you that this is the blogified version of the following thread
Top comments (7)
Most amazingly - Snowpack is programmed in Typescript! Not in Go, not in Rust, not in C++ ... just TS ! So probably it's fast because of it's approach/design, more than because of its implementation per se.
But what happened to all of the other blazing-fast bundlers which were making waves recently (and which were indeed programmed in Go, Rust, C++ and so on)? Would be interesting to compare (hint: follow-up article?)
yupp it's approach/design is just amazing and sure that's what makes it so fast and wonderfull
Interesting
Ikr
ViteJs, esbuild. Oh yeah
He's right you know
π π