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ZucaCMS ~ RevCMS Edit ~ Feedback
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<blockquote data-quote="Parsov" data-source="post: 469248" data-attributes="member: 68429"><p>I agree but it's a private server community so people do whatever they want. Everything here is basically a rename.</p><p>So that's not something people complain about anymore. Because there is no point. People will do what they want to do whether it's right or wrong.</p><p></p><p>NestJS is pretty good but it's somewhat new. Just like Typescript is. Nest is not as widespread and he might have difficulties and when he does he won't be able to get around it easily since these technologies are frankly new and just becoming a thing. So finding solutions will be harder. You also mentioned that you don't know what level his skills are on. For him to actually learn NestJS he'll need to read documentation of Typescript, then NodeJS then Nest itself and things like TypeORM. And above that he needs to know how Javascript works since Typescript is basically Javascript. Most importantly he needs to learn about the fundamentals of programming itself and concepts of architectures. If he wants to be a good Nest developer he'll need to learn these.</p><p></p><p>What I recommend is leave NestJS for later because no one is gonna pay you enough to use it and not many companies use it anyway. Let alone that it's frankly new and so is Typescript so because of that it might be harder for you to get your head around it.</p><p></p><p>Learn Javascript first. After you're fluent with it or advanced then move onto reading about Typescript. It will be way easier. And then from there you can directly just go to NestJS. That way you'll understand the principles you'll know the purpose of everything and you'll know how they function. Although a great language Typescript is a bit bizarre especially for people who are moving from other programming languages. But most of those weird things come from Javascript. Since it's a scripting language it allows more flexibility and that's why if you move from a strict language to javascript it might seem confusing.</p><p></p><p>I pointed out everything you needed to know so if you do want to learn it consider all of this.</p><p>[automerge]1621332451[/automerge]</p><p></p><p>Laravel has everything built-in and it's easy to use. Symfony on the other hand is somewhat supposed to be on a professional level more hardcore and industry-level. "Apparently". If we're gonna speak about performance and industry-level technologies big companies are not pussies to use Smyfony they are capable of using something 10 times better. The only people that will use PHP anyway is startups and not so great companies. And for these type of people / companies Laravel does the job too. So I don't see a reason for this guy to complain about speed and performance or efficiency. Laravel is efficient and powerful enough for a Habbo CMS. He is not building some massive infrastructure that needs speed and power and yet then Smyfony is kind of useless for that too. Because he might aswell just use something more advanced than PHP.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Parsov, post: 469248, member: 68429"] I agree but it's a private server community so people do whatever they want. Everything here is basically a rename. So that's not something people complain about anymore. Because there is no point. People will do what they want to do whether it's right or wrong. NestJS is pretty good but it's somewhat new. Just like Typescript is. Nest is not as widespread and he might have difficulties and when he does he won't be able to get around it easily since these technologies are frankly new and just becoming a thing. So finding solutions will be harder. You also mentioned that you don't know what level his skills are on. For him to actually learn NestJS he'll need to read documentation of Typescript, then NodeJS then Nest itself and things like TypeORM. And above that he needs to know how Javascript works since Typescript is basically Javascript. Most importantly he needs to learn about the fundamentals of programming itself and concepts of architectures. If he wants to be a good Nest developer he'll need to learn these. What I recommend is leave NestJS for later because no one is gonna pay you enough to use it and not many companies use it anyway. Let alone that it's frankly new and so is Typescript so because of that it might be harder for you to get your head around it. Learn Javascript first. After you're fluent with it or advanced then move onto reading about Typescript. It will be way easier. And then from there you can directly just go to NestJS. That way you'll understand the principles you'll know the purpose of everything and you'll know how they function. Although a great language Typescript is a bit bizarre especially for people who are moving from other programming languages. But most of those weird things come from Javascript. Since it's a scripting language it allows more flexibility and that's why if you move from a strict language to javascript it might seem confusing. I pointed out everything you needed to know so if you do want to learn it consider all of this. [automerge]1621332451[/automerge] Laravel has everything built-in and it's easy to use. Symfony on the other hand is somewhat supposed to be on a professional level more hardcore and industry-level. "Apparently". If we're gonna speak about performance and industry-level technologies big companies are not pussies to use Smyfony they are capable of using something 10 times better. The only people that will use PHP anyway is startups and not so great companies. And for these type of people / companies Laravel does the job too. So I don't see a reason for this guy to complain about speed and performance or efficiency. Laravel is efficient and powerful enough for a Habbo CMS. He is not building some massive infrastructure that needs speed and power and yet then Smyfony is kind of useless for that too. Because he might aswell just use something more advanced than PHP. [/QUOTE]
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