frontend Memes

Project Requirements

Project Requirements
Content Frontend Dev PM describes new project requirements: . WCAG 3.0

Let's Go Back To Monke

Let's Go Back To Monke
Sometimes I wonder if returning to monke would be easier than debugging that React component for the 17th time. The sweet bliss of ignorance—no JavaScript frameworks, no variable scope issues, just vibing with the squad and hunting for ants. The ultimate escape from dependency hell. Maybe those chimps are onto something...

Every New Desktop App Dev Be Like

Every New Desktop App Dev Be Like
Nobody wants to touch those crusty desktop frameworks from the 90s anymore. Qt and WinForms? Hard pass. But wrap a glorified browser in a desktop shell and call it "cross-platform" and suddenly everyone's throwing confetti. "Look mom, I made a desktop app with 500MB of node_modules and it only takes 8 seconds to launch a hello world!" The absolute state of desktop development in 2023 - where your app is basically a website that somehow uses more RAM than Photoshop.

Apple Forgot To Disable Production Source Maps On The App Store Web App

Apple Forgot To Disable Production Source Maps On The App Store Web App
The trillion-dollar company that makes privacy its selling point just handed out their source code like it's free candy at a tech conference. Source maps in production is the digital equivalent of leaving your house keys under the doormat with a neon sign pointing to them. Some developer is getting a strongly worded Slack message right about now. For the uninitiated: source maps are files that link minified/compiled code back to the original source, meant for debugging but absolutely not for showing your competitors how your app works. It's like publishing your diary but forgetting to tear out the pages where you wrote down all your secrets.

The Password Length Paradox

The Password Length Paradox
The classic password paradox strikes again! Your password needs to be secure enough to protect Fort Knox but also fit within arbitrary character limits. The error message says "This password is too long" while showing a field full of dots that's apparently 37 characters. The irony is delicious - we're constantly told to use complex passwords, but then get slapped with restrictions like "maximum 30 characters." It's like asking someone to build an impenetrable fortress but only giving them 30 bricks. And that pink "Reset password" button is just waiting to start this security circus all over again. The struggle between security requirements and arbitrary limitations is the true final boss of web development.

Ten Seconds Remaining

Ten Seconds Remaining
The eternal war between actual programmers and HTML "programmers" claims another victim! This poor soul just committed the cardinal sin of web development—calling himself an "HTML programmer" to a software engineer dad. It's like telling a chef you're also a culinary expert because you can microwave a Hot Pocket. HTML is a markup language, not a programming language—a distinction that will get you ejected from any serious developer's house faster than a syntax error in production code. Dad's 10-second countdown is basically the human equivalent of a connection timeout. No exceptions will be caught here!

Just One More Hook Bro

Just One More Hook Bro
Oh. My. GOD! The absolute state of React developers in 2023! 💀 We're out here DELIBERATELY turning off optimizations with useMemo like some kind of performance-hating MONSTERS! The sheer AUDACITY of that little stick figure just smiling and nodding while React's optimization features are being MURDERED right in front of him! This is the equivalent of watching someone pour sugar in your gas tank and responding with "yea" instead of calling the police! The cognitive dissonance is just *chef's kiss* SPECTACULAR! React's over here trying its best with all those fancy hooks, and we're just like "no thanks, I PREFER my app to run like it's on a 1998 calculator watch!" 🙃

Let There Be Light

Let There Be Light
The eternal struggle between React hooks! Top panel shows the primitive useState hook - basic, straightforward, but kinda boring (hence the darkness). Bottom panel? That's when you discover useEffect and suddenly your face is illuminated with the divine light of side effects! Finally, a way to increment that counter without manually calling setCount everywhere. The transformation is basically the coding equivalent of discovering fire. Just wait until this dev discovers the reducer pattern and their head literally explodes.

Dealing With Safari As A Webdev

Dealing With Safari As A Webdev
Nothing says "I've made poor career choices" quite like spending 14 hours debugging a feature that works perfectly in Chrome, Firefox, and Edge, only to have Safari render it like it's 2007. You build something beautiful, test it everywhere, then Safari comes along like that one relative who still uses Internet Explorer and asks "what's the cloud?" The worst part? Apple's response is basically "sounds like a you problem." Meanwhile, you're questioning every CSS flex property you've ever written and contemplating a peaceful life as a goat farmer instead.

Rate My Groundbreaking Startup

Rate My Groundbreaking Startup
Ah yes, another revolutionary startup idea: Tailwind CSS + dark theme + neon colors. The holy trinity of "I'm totally not building the same thing as everyone else." Squidward's sarcasm perfectly captures what happens when you pitch your groundbreaking web app to anyone who's seen more than three websites in the past decade. Next you'll tell me you're using React and MongoDB too. Truly disruptive.

Front End Design Versus Users

Front End Design Versus Users
Ah yes, the classic accessibility symbol that's clearly been through QA testing. Designer: "I've created this perfectly aligned wheelchair icon." Users: "I prefer my accessibility with a side of existential crisis, thanks." This is what happens when you deploy to production without checking how your CSS renders on actual pavement. The real-world equivalent of "it worked on my machine."

The Eternal Frontend vs Backend Struggle

The Eternal Frontend vs Backend Struggle
THE ETERNAL STRUGGLE OF THE DEVELOPER UNIVERSE! 🌟 Backend devs creating frontend: "Behold! My masterpiece functions FLAWLESSLY... if you ignore the fact it looks like it was designed by a sleep-deprived raccoon using MS Paint." Frontend devs making backend: "Feast your eyes on this GORGEOUS architecture that crashes spectacularly the moment someone actually tries to use it!" It's the developer equivalent of asking a fish to climb a tree and then wondering why it's gasping dramatically on the ground. THE AUDACITY! 💅