Look, that web app in that tutorial is roughly 200-300 lines of code in regular js/css/html, maybe less.
The onus is on you guys to tell me why I’d add cognitive overhead for simple webapps, and if it’s coming from the Rust community, I’m expecting to hear ‘performance’, in which case I’m game.
I have the same opinion on overheard in the JS churn cycle, it’s up to you to make the case why the overhead makes sense for the cruddiest of apps.
We shouldn’t coronate things willy nilly. If Rust is the one true blood prince of the C era, I expect him to reign in similar domains, but please don’t flex that power in domains where you are a sub standard solution.
All hail Rust, but jesus, slow down. That’s a simple js app.
I don't know what to tell you. It's a blog post. Simple apps are how you start to learn things. Nobody is saying that doing this is the most amazing end all be-all JS is dead and over lololol.
Some people like Rust. Some people like web apps. Some people want to use Rust to write web apps. If you don't, there are tons of other technologies you can (and should!) use to do that, and someone saying "hey if you're interested, here's how with a small example" isn't a threat to any of that.
Fair enough. The thing about the developer community is that many of the best and worst trends came from innocuous blog posts. From innocuous conference talks. It’s a blessing and a curse.