Anythony Campolo talks with John, Ward, and Dan about Redwood JS. Is Redwood JS a framework or a library? Why would you use Redwood JS? What problems does it solve? Is it for beginners or experienced developers?John Papa @John_PapaWard Bell @WardBellDan Wahlin @DanWahlinCraig Shoemaker @craigshoemakerAnthony Campolo @ajcwebdevBrought to you byIdeaBladeNarwhal Visit nx.dev to get the preeminent open-source toolkit for monorepo development, today. Resources:Anthony on GitHubAnthony’s BlogRedwoodJSRedwoodJS Community ForumRedwoodJS Discord12-part series "A First Look at RedwoodJS"RedwoodJS own tutorialsGesture library Hammer.jsTailwind CSSChainsawReactRemix for ReactLambda School bootcamp for full stackRemix for ReactPrisma jsGraphQLApollo for GraphQLFauna DBRedwood File StructureCLI CommandsTom Preston WarnerTom Preston Warner on TwitterGatsbyBlitzNext.jsFullstack Jamstack PodcastIs it safe?Timejumps02:04 Guest intro04:30 What are the use cases for Redwood?05:41 Is it a framework or a library?08:18 Why would I use Redwood?10:31 Sponsor: Nrwl11:15 Figuring out what problem you're solving16:28 Databases and Redwood19:58 Technologies in Redwood34:29 Sponsor: IdeaBlade35:37 Is Redwood for beginners or experienced developers?46:44 Final thoughtsPodcast editing on this episode done by Chris Enns of Lemon Productions.
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Dive into JavaScript and Web development stories with hosts John Papa, Ward Bell, Craig Shoemaker, and Dan Wahlin. Web Rush is a weekly podcast where we tackle the challenges facing Web developers today and invite expert guests on the show to share their experience solving concrete problems while building real Web applications. Listen for practical insights and honest talk about the topics you are facing today, with Web Rush. Sponsored by AG Grid and Nrwl.io