68 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
68 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: Thoughts on JavaScript
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description: Describing the architecture of Handlers, Services, (Domains), and Presentation
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date: 2024-08-11
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tags:
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- development
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- javascript
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- typescript
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slug: more-about-javascript
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draft: true
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---
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## My History With JavaScript
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I think the first time I wrote JavaScript and got paid for it, I was young, dumb, and willing to work at a design agency for nearly minimum wage making WordPress templates and CakePHP applications. The team I worked with had adopted jQuery for all things front-end - which was the style at the time. I think this time was about 2014.
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From there, I moved on to other Agency jobs and finally ended up at my current place of employment as a lowly _PHP Developer_. This role was designed to solely work on a single Magento 1 codebase. Again, jQuery was the tool of choice. Of course the JavaScript landscape was changing rapidly with the introductions of Node.js, and frameworks like Angular and React. I paid no mind to these since the bulk of my work was still in the world of Magento 1 and working on a plan to migrate to Magento 2.
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It wouldn't be until 2018 (or maybe 2019?) that I would write a line of JavaScript for Node.js. We had decided to go all-in on AWS Lambda. I worked on a service that would push order data out of our Magento instance into our Production Facility's database. Let's call this _The Bridge_. This Lambda was invoked by API Gateway. This was a very small web service, essentially. This was, also, my first experience with _Callback Hell_. There was no `await` and no real `Promise` API (except, _I think_ Bluebird, but I never knew about it at the time) yet. The service actually needed to do a lot of queries, and use those results for other queries, so on, and so forth. If you're familiar with working on Callback Hell you will recognize this:
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```javascript
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var mysql = require("mysql");
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var config = {...};
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mysql.connect(config, function (err, conn) {
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// handle the error
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if (err) {
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console.error(err);
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return;
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}
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var query = "INSERT ...";
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conn.query(query, function (err, results) {
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if (err) {
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return;
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}
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// do something with results
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// do another query
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conn.query(query, function (err, results) {
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// handle error
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// do more queries
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conn.query(query, function (err, results) {
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// etc.
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});
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});
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});
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});
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```
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_This sucks._
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We ended up rewriting this service in C# as that was the most popular language within the organization at the time. Honestly, thank god. I didn't need to write or maintain the service once it fell into the hands of the .NET team.
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## How I Approached Big Applications
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Eventually all the .NET guys left the company. My boss left the company. I was put in charge and the first thing I did was deploy an Express.js application to completely rewrite the service discussed above. I did this because this was actually faster to do than figure out how the build system (Jenkins, Ansible, and TeamCity _I think_) and deploy it to our common pattern architecture. It was also a way for me to prove to my new boss that I can get things done and that moving to slowly remove our reliance on .NET and IIS for our services was a worthy endeavor.
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A lot of my experience up until that point was mostly working in Magento 2, which is a massive, Enterprisey, PHP application. Modern PHP tends look more and more like C# or Java as the years go on. So that's where my mind is - poisoned by web MVC and Enterprise OOP (_tm_).
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