If this ships, it will change javascript forever

Ғылым және технология

Signals in JavaScript might be at Stage 0, but it's a very exciting Stage 0 proposal. My love of Solid forces me to be hyped
SOURCES
github.com/proposal-signals/p...
/ a-tc39-proposal-for-si...
/ 1775164667179966685
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S/O Ph4se0n3 for the awesome edit 🙏

Пікірлер: 626

  • @int4_t
    @int4_tАй бұрын

    Javascript: The new javascript framework

  • @ninhdang1106

    @ninhdang1106

    Ай бұрын

    we will eventually get there lol

  • @mfpears

    @mfpears

    Ай бұрын

    Predictable and good

  • @SMWssaamm
    @SMWssaammАй бұрын

    It's funny that we need the term "signals" when it's pretty much just a particular version of that good old observer pattern

  • @n30v4

    @n30v4

    Ай бұрын

    this

  • @isbestlizard

    @isbestlizard

    Ай бұрын

    Right? "Signals" is confusing the hell out of me because this is nothing to do with signals.

  • @W1ngSMC

    @W1ngSMC

    Ай бұрын

    It's a signal because it's a two way thing. Push dirty flags towards consumers when root data changes, and push recompute requests towards the root when the new data is needed for consumption (and also do no recompute when inputs don't change). So it's a lazy, two-way observer pattern.

  • @SMWssaamm

    @SMWssaamm

    Ай бұрын

    @@W1ngSMC exactly

  • @MirkoVukusic

    @MirkoVukusic

    Ай бұрын

    currently playing with LegendApp state and even syntax for basic stuff is almost identical

  • @stefanmaric
    @stefanmaricАй бұрын

    The big win of Signals in the spec is not payload size or performance, it is interoperability. If this happens, it will be as impactful as Promises. It is not only about sharing code and state between frontend frameworks, but also replacing any kind of set+onchange interface out there, just like Promises replaced callback hell.

  • @csy897

    @csy897

    Ай бұрын

    I feel like a baby because I have used Promises from day 1 and do not know a world without it. But I can see why signals would be as impactful

  • @Tanner-cz4bd

    @Tanner-cz4bd

    Ай бұрын

    Its okay ​@csy897

  • @user-kt7li4le8s

    @user-kt7li4le8s

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah looking at old axios code in large apps is just... Mind-blowing honestly 😂

  • @gearboxworks

    @gearboxworks

    Ай бұрын

    > "Like Promises replaced callback hell" Out of the frying pan and into the fire, e.g. async/await "two-color" function hell! 😢

  • @stefanmaric

    @stefanmaric

    Ай бұрын

    @@gearboxworks to clarify, Promises are independent from async functions. But yeah, I feel you.

  • @seandegee
    @seandegeeАй бұрын

    So like Vue state (ref, computed, etc...) but in javascript itself?

  • @allothernameswherealreadytaken

    @allothernameswherealreadytaken

    Ай бұрын

    Seems like it

  • @lawrencejob
    @lawrencejobАй бұрын

    I don’t hate Signals but putting things into the language this keenly is exactly how JavaScript ended up this way. Having said that, the performance advantage of lowering this work to a language primitive (think executed in C) would be huge. I would like to see what syntactic sugar like they used for async/await might look like because the library is ugly to use in the proposal.

  • @asdfghyter

    @asdfghyter

    Ай бұрын

    i think it makes a lot of sense to put it in the language since almost all popular frameworks use it, but i do agree that we need to be careful!

  • @dasten123
    @dasten123Ай бұрын

    Looks just like Vue. But I'm happy for all of you who are stuck with React because you might finally get a proper reactivity system lol

  • @klausburgersten

    @klausburgersten

    Ай бұрын

    bro redux selectors predate vue

  • @dasten123

    @dasten123

    Ай бұрын

    @@klausburgersten yeah they probably do... whatever that is

  • @vincentv8991

    @vincentv8991

    Ай бұрын

    Dude bro

  • @dasten123

    @dasten123

    Ай бұрын

    @@vincentv8991 dude

  • @allothernameswherealreadytaken

    @allothernameswherealreadytaken

    Ай бұрын

    Lol

  • @insu_na
    @insu_naАй бұрын

    Meanwhile Haskell devs: "Look what they need to mimic a fraction of our power!"

  • @Malix_off

    @Malix_off

    Ай бұрын

    At least JS and TS ship once in a while

  • @ArneBab

    @ArneBab

    Ай бұрын

    And that’s the point: they want a minimal base that provides the most useful parts without forcing laziness as default.

  • @morphles

    @morphles

    Ай бұрын

    Not just Haskell, seems people are starting to understand that declarative is future (and I'm 100% sure imperative will die, as is spaghetti nonsense in long run), so instead of fully committing some salad gets invented. Which is still progress, but still. As shown by polyfill it was doable all along :) I guess just "environment" (read people) need to grow.

  • @ArneBab

    @ArneBab

    Ай бұрын

    @@morphles isn’t that what the prolog people used to say?

  • @karaloop9544

    @karaloop9544

    Ай бұрын

    @@ArneBab Only in a couple of days later, they need to wait for their proof of concept to finish evaluating.

  • @MrJester831
    @MrJester831Ай бұрын

    CanJS has had this since 2013 but so few people know about the framework that all their innovations went largely unnoticed

  • @Dominataaa

    @Dominataaa

    Ай бұрын

    Knockout js also had since 2010..

  • @Remindor

    @Remindor

    Ай бұрын

    I used CanJS and also its predecessor, JavaScript MVC. It's weird how we had all these great frameworks and they all disappeared and were replaced by React. Also, what happened to Polymer framework??? IMO, Polymer was superior to React but very few companies used it at the time. I guess at least now there is Lit... But you don't really even need a framework at all nowadays. Web Components is powerful stuff.

  • @ziad_jkhan

    @ziad_jkhan

    Ай бұрын

    @@Remindor Vue is actually the most popular one that was inspired by KnockoutJs but the video doesn't mention that somehow.

  • @patricknelson

    @patricknelson

    Ай бұрын

    @@ziad_jkhan​​⁠ … Vue is _explicitly_ called out at 13:15 as one of many frameworks that have provided input on the proposed spec.

  • @patricknelson

    @patricknelson

    Ай бұрын

    @@Remindor WC’s are super cool. Lit does at least purportedly help take some of the boilerplate out of writing WC’s. I haven’t used it yet but considering experimenting with it.

  • @tonyohagan
    @tonyohaganАй бұрын

    Vue has had signals baked in for many years but with a nicer syntax. It was based on KnockoutJS that's ancient.

  • @stephan553

    @stephan553

    Ай бұрын

    Yea, _very_ disappointing to see how Theo glosses over the OG and state of the art works cause it just ain't give clickz.

  • @tonyohagan

    @tonyohagan

    Ай бұрын

    Also can define computed get and *set* abstraction in Vue. Very useful when binding.

  • @learnings.academy

    @learnings.academy

    Ай бұрын

    They use proxy objects to attain this functionality

  • @_nikeee
    @_nikeeeАй бұрын

    Before standardizing this, just build a common library that has the feature set similar to this. A polyfill without patching global objects, if you will. Migrate all frameworks to use this library. Ship it. Make them use what this proposal is intending so ship. See if it works for all of them in production, not just listing the frameworks in a proposal. We don't want to end up with an implementation that half of the frameworks listed effectively cannot use. Take your time iterating. If done, let's see if there are still benefits by bringing it into the browser and that justifies adding something to the language that will stay there forever.

  • @SimonBuchanNz

    @SimonBuchanNz

    Ай бұрын

    Signals have been around for a long damn time, and are demonstrably good for performance already. The reason to get it in the language is that then the DOM can use it and the implementation can be even more performant. It would be super nice to be able to assign a function to a label and it Just Works™.

  • @saiv46

    @saiv46

    Ай бұрын

    The most useful features have come from jQuery, which was used basically everywhere. Nowadays we have a bunch of frameworks with own set of features

  • @azizsafudin

    @azizsafudin

    Ай бұрын

    @@saiv46exactly, signals are already in many frameworks and have proven their value. This just promotes it to the language level.

  • @andybrice2711

    @andybrice2711

    Ай бұрын

    It looks like that's what they're doing, right?

  • @heyheyhophop

    @heyheyhophop

    Ай бұрын

    WHat arer you, old? Have u seen all the blahblah.JS c0ntribootor nnicknames at allz?

  • @boccobadz
    @boccobadzАй бұрын

    I feel like we're getting closer and closer to "framework singularity" because most people agreed that signals are something worth implementing and using. Maybe at some point the difference between frameworks will come down only to syntax.

  • @hanzo2001

    @hanzo2001

    Ай бұрын

    And some edge case performance optimizations, and framework interoperability... Probably

  • @sucklessboi4718

    @sucklessboi4718

    Ай бұрын

    I think 15 years from now best features of every framework will be native and we'll just write vanilla JS.

  • @stefanmaric

    @stefanmaric

    Ай бұрын

    State management is indeed core and central to every framework, but there's much more to it.

  • @Alec.Vision

    @Alec.Vision

    Ай бұрын

    JS, and by extension TS, are the fastest moving languages in history. Love it or hate it, JS is the social programming language. That gives it the highest adoption, thus the most iterations/collaborators, thus the highest likelihood of becoming ubiquitous to the point of absorbing all competition. See: AssemblyScript (TS->Assembly); Hermes Static (TS->C); Frameworks are no exception. Resistance is futile. All will be assimilated.

  • @lmnk

    @lmnk

    Ай бұрын

    It all return to nothing...

  • @mikestokes2543
    @mikestokes2543Ай бұрын

    A number of concepts here that are very vue.js. Would love to see this in core js

  • @MrDragos360

    @MrDragos360

    Ай бұрын

    the concept of computed is the same from Vue. As some one who works with Vue2 since 2019 I can say these people are way behind Vue and this nothing too fancy or to be excited about.

  • @CHN-yh3uv

    @CHN-yh3uv

    Ай бұрын

    @@MrDragos360vue has done a terrible job at marketing. I had a job interview recently where a senior frontend dev told me their company moved from vue to react for WAIT FOR IT performance reasons 🤣

  • @jithinshah2754

    @jithinshah2754

    Ай бұрын

    Evan you is also part of this proposal and he tweeted recently regarding this.

  • @Pretagonist

    @Pretagonist

    Ай бұрын

    getting signals into js itself would help vue performance wise as well. Being able to share vue ref states with other js frameworks/apps is also nice. But yeah vue already has most (or all?) of this and it's one of the reasons why I use vue when I get the choice.

  • @Exilum
    @ExilumАй бұрын

    7:20 It's weird to me no one in chat pointed out the explanation of why this is valuable isn't complete. You could do the same with lambdas or function references that you call when you want to get the value, but the main difference with signals is the amount of computation. Signals are only computed once per update, they are not recomputed when you want to get the value, which is what's so powerful about them.

  • @LeonBlade

    @LeonBlade

    Ай бұрын

    This explanation actually clarified something about signals for me. Thanks.

  • @tvujtatata

    @tvujtatata

    Ай бұрын

    He literally said that shortly after.

  • @Exilum

    @Exilum

    Ай бұрын

    @@tvujtatata Yes it was in the article. It wouldn't have escaped you as well that I was talking about chat at a timestep in the video as well, right?

  • @BrankoDimitrijevic021

    @BrankoDimitrijevic021

    Ай бұрын

    The main benefit is in effects though. The effect will be re-run only if its sources change. If your effect is a React component, that means it will be rerendered only when necessary, without rerendering its parent or child components.

  • @Fiercesoulking

    @Fiercesoulking

    Ай бұрын

    ??? I mean that is the point its not an event implementation you ask for an update manually this is exactly what you often do in all kinds of systems with lambdas or function references. In the end similar to lambdas it makes it extremely hard to find out where things are happening

  • @snowballeffect7812
    @snowballeffect7812Ай бұрын

    10:30 wasn't sold until this point. this is actually super useful (from an optimization standpoint).

  • @nikilk
    @nikilkАй бұрын

    So much about Signals reminds me of how Jotai is designed. The whole atomic state like each signal represents, and having derived state similar to signals.computed. However signals takes it a step forward by not re-computing the graph when the root node changes, but only when a specific node is consumed. Clever!

  • @lThePotatoCrew
    @lThePotatoCrewАй бұрын

    LMAO, I know web components aren't ideal in an environment where you can use frameworks. That said, I build and use web components daily, they work extremely well in a template based language system like shopify liquid themes. I see them as little islands of logic 😄. Although, behind the scenes I'm using solidjs which makes the whole process much better xD. I've actually built an extremely complex set of web components used to render a dynamic js sidecart. The components work for rendering the data while having full control of styling the sidecart however you want. The best part is because we use SolidJs signals for both the cart and the web components graph, we can ensure fine grain updates within the sidecart's elements. Sorry for the mini rant, I just want think they work really well under the right circumstances 😄.

  • @Grepehu

    @Grepehu

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly, I'm also very fond of web components and use them a lot in a lot of projects. Also I've seen some libraries for React like the Mux Client SDK and LiveKit that use web components under the hood and simply wrap their components in connectors to easily distribute their components across React, Svelte and others without having to rewrite their entire product.

  • @aquaductape

    @aquaductape

    Ай бұрын

    Ayyy solid!!

  • @sentinelav
    @sentinelavАй бұрын

    This is great, and I can think of a clear analogy to node-based CG software, but on a much higher interaction level. In Gaea for example, when connecting noise and erosion nodes to generate terrain, there's a variation in compute time i.e. 1-20 seconds. So once a change is made, all downstream nodes are marked as dirty, and then only when browsing to that node will the new result be computed and displayed. If an upstream node has to be recomputed, it's done so automatically. This ensures that the minimum amount of computation is done to give the artist fresh results.

  • @LeteFox
    @LeteFoxАй бұрын

    19:26 I'm not familiar with other signal implementations, but Preact signals have a peek() method that lets you read the value of the signal without subscribing to changes. This is similar to passing a function to setState() to use the current value, since you shouldn't be using the current value of "state" directly. e.g. signal.set(signal.peek() + 1) vs setState(prevState => prevState + 1)

  • @SimonBuchanNz

    @SimonBuchanNz

    Ай бұрын

    You can do this in solid's signals too, through a couple of options, but it's a bit uglier IMHO.

  • @reoseah

    @reoseah

    Ай бұрын

    It's untrack(() => ...) in Solid. Solid's signals are just two functions that you can call, not an object with methods like .get() .set()

  • @LeteFox

    @LeteFox

    Ай бұрын

    @@reoseah Preact has untracked(() => ...) as well, but I haven't used it for basic state updates since its much more verbose

  • @simonhartley9158

    @simonhartley9158

    Ай бұрын

    Something so convenient seems to go in the opposite direction to what the use of the subtle namespace is trying to imply.

  • @mt1104uk
    @mt1104ukАй бұрын

    I loved KnockoutJs and still have a fairly large codebase using it,, I find it hilarious the world is coming back round to what Knockout did in the first place. Unfortunately I also have a huge codebase using RxJs and React, so swings in roundabouts.

  • @helleye311
    @helleye311Ай бұрын

    This is pretty fantastic. I hope you'll get us more updates if/when this progresses through the stages. Although I doubt it'll affect react, even if there's full browser support etc. But who knows.

  • @metropolis10
    @metropolis10Ай бұрын

    I do think it's cool how in almost every video you talk about the people, what they did, and what they are doing, as part of the context for what you're talking about. Bringing us up to speed on their "reputation" if you will, beyond just github stars. Of course the downside is that we're not evaluating things solely based on their own merits, but the world really doesn't work like that, does it?

  • @jaybee6382
    @jaybee6382Ай бұрын

    We definitely need a more primitive-driven approach to web engineering application based on the main themes such as reactivity, rendering and networking. Exciting proposal.

  • @wlockuz4467
    @wlockuz4467Ай бұрын

    You know I had to pinch myself because someone was proposing a change to the spec instead of just creating yet another framework. I thought methods like these were forbidden and everything new had to be done via a new framework in JS land. These brave guys really challenging the status quo and I hope it works for them. /s

  • @yapet
    @yapetАй бұрын

    23:44 elide verb /ɪˈlaɪd/ elide something - to leave out the sound of part of a word when you are pronouncing it “The ‘t’ in ‘often’ may be elided.”

  • @CoolestPossibleName

    @CoolestPossibleName

    Ай бұрын

    🤓

  • @hanzo2001

    @hanzo2001

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, this! Thank you

  • @prozacchiwawa
    @prozacchiwawaАй бұрын

    Thanks for pointing this out. Been following various signal based systems (including early elm and purescript) for a bunch of years. It's neat to see that they're tackling rendering timeliness, out-of-date-ness and effectfulness. It's easy to write a signal graph but very hard to get the consumption API right. Don't feel great about the amount of work left to the consumer in the blog post, but we'll see how it falls out. There's nothing worse than writing something nice in a reactive system, adding one more component or relationship and suddenly being without a paddle trying to track down a lost or retrograde ui update.

  • @MrGarkin
    @MrGarkinАй бұрын

    Mobx at the time was revolutionary. Bloated, quirky at early versions. Still blown up my apps complexity down to 1/3 of what it was before.

  • @Me-vc4sf
    @Me-vc4sfАй бұрын

    After 2 years of adopting this" this feature has been deprecated "

  • @kahnfatman

    @kahnfatman

    Ай бұрын

    YUP YUP! The profiles of the proponents worry me... I don't see their future. I don't see the future of their work.

  • @dead-claudia

    @dead-claudia

    Ай бұрын

    yep the rate this got adopted gave me pause. i did recently realize mithril.js has had a hacked-together unintentional construction of half of this (in the style of every program eventually growing a bug-riddled half-implementation of common lisp) since its first release 10 years ago (2014 march 17), so that makes me feel much more like it's truly on to something. (i'm also a former maintainer of mithril.js, so...)

  • @shellcatt
    @shellcattАй бұрын

    Thanks for covering this topic. This might finally replace those all too complicated state managers that one is bound to use just to keep data flow safe and smooth.

  • @thegrumpydeveloper
    @thegrumpydeveloperАй бұрын

    This seems like the refined version of observable. Smaller and more minimal api based on proven usage within libraries. Seeing key members of the libs all working together is awesome. Looking forward to react adopting this (better late than never!)

  • @jamesauble8091
    @jamesauble8091Ай бұрын

    It's unfortunate that "a sink" and "async" are homophones.

  • @carminator12

    @carminator12

    Ай бұрын

    Maybe a intended pun

  • @hanzo2001

    @hanzo2001

    Ай бұрын

    Really really close. They sound different in my head but I can see the source of confusion in non native speakers

  • @ARexplor

    @ARexplor

    Ай бұрын

    I say “a sink” as uh sink and “async” as ay sink

  • @bentonio07

    @bentonio07

    Ай бұрын

    But usually the context in which the two will be used will be disambiguating. It’s probably only ambiguous without context.

  • @pairofrooks

    @pairofrooks

    Ай бұрын

    yeah i woulda preferred consumer and producer but i'd also just call tree-shaking dead code removal :shrug:

  • @GutenTagLP
    @GutenTagLPАй бұрын

    This is such an interesting proposal, especially since I am currently working on my own form library that us built using the Preact teams Signals

  • @yapet
    @yapetАй бұрын

    7:20 I’m the one who asked that question, and I’m not convinced that the “implementation performance” is a good enough reason. I’d argue JS implementation of such a high-level concept is comparable to the browser native one. I don’t particularly see opportunities for optimisations that the browser sees, where JS doesn’t. I could accept an argument that it is done for interoperability between signals libraries, but debatably this could’ve been achieved by the common lib/adapters if desired. Don’t think there is much demand for interop. For it to be there, the signals ecosystem has to mature a bit. I might have missed the argument given by theo live. I was hella eepy at 3am (eu gang rise up). Might’ve been chatting in the chat at that moment.

  • @stefanmaric

    @stefanmaric

    Ай бұрын

    You would be surprised by how much Signals have matured. This effort to standardize stems from the fact that all frameworks have derived pretty much the same Signals implementation independently, the push-pull tainted graph. They do differ on how effects run and other details and the proposal accounts for that.

  • @stefanmaric

    @stefanmaric

    Ай бұрын

    And one point about interop: even if they all agree on a single base signal lib, you need a single instance of the lib running for it to work (since it relies on a single call stack context to track subscriptions). This is challenging as it requires npm/yark/pnpm trickery with peerDependencies, bundler configuration, and/or manual setup.

  • @yapet

    @yapet

    Ай бұрын

    My argument rests on interop not being desired enough feature. Don’t think it is. Can’t see many reasons why it would be. If it were, it is something that community can solve without tc39 standardization. Additionally, signals can be adapted between implementation, even if there is a perf penalty. I doubt that cross-signal-implementation calls are frequent enough to manifest perf issues. As to other arguments I’ve encountered: - Perf gains are likely insignificant - Optimization opportunities are lacking - Signals being in DOM doesn’t achieve much. Maybe observability of attributes. Can be done with MutationObserver (I’ll give you that it isn’t a particularly nice API) Yea, it is doomer-like mentality and the “ooooh scare of change”, but maybe let’s not bloat JS even larger than it is. Look at where it has lead C++ to. But I guess either way, acceptance of the proposal won’t really affect me that much. I’ll gladly use JS signals if they are a part of library interface or they suit my needs (as opposed to reaching out for a 3rd party library). You have every right to be excited by this addition. I am just not. Not sure it sits right with me.

  • @gro967

    @gro967

    Ай бұрын

    There is a whole lot of optimization opportunities here. Implementing stuff like this in V8 or another JS runtime will drastically improve performance when you start to natively optimize dependency graphs and things like (de)serialization.

  • @stefanmaric

    @stefanmaric

    Ай бұрын

    @@yapetthe interop goes beyond frontend frameworks. Signals being a first-class citizen could replace every kind of set+subscribe interface. I find Promises to be a good parallel here. Assuming you have been in this space long enough, would you rather still be using Bluebird.js or Q today? Did you imagine what the ecosystem would have looked like with native Promises back then? Could you imagine a JS world without native Promises today?

  • @ivankudinov4153
    @ivankudinov4153Ай бұрын

    That article was the cleanest explanation you can think of

  • @JamesBrown-rd2ku
    @JamesBrown-rd2kuАй бұрын

    2 way reactivity can be a challenge when you're first hit with the circumstance, especially on the frontend where you come across large data sets and performance bottlenecks, but frankly it's something I've only found difficult in some frontend framework implementations. Vue and solid implement it well but a native implementation is welcome. This will only negatively impact those who have rigid mental models of unidirectional binding

  • @saxtant
    @saxtantАй бұрын

    I'm with you, it's exactly what's needed.

  • @pitzera
    @pitzeraАй бұрын

    It's nice that one of the best features from QML (Qts alternative frontend language, a mixture of JS and JSON) will come to JS. Signals make stuff so easy.

  • @connorlatham9578
    @connorlatham9578Ай бұрын

    Huh, didn't even know this work was happening. Very cool. I think what would go really nicely in hand here would be a "query" library for asking to "subscribe" to certain signals. Every signal registers their name to a global namespace, then you can "listen" to signals from throughout the network by querying that namespace and getting a signal in return.

  • @MrOboema
    @MrOboemaАй бұрын

    Somebody on the design team likes knockoutJS 😂

  • @marcelo-ramos

    @marcelo-ramos

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly. Pretty much the same thing.

  • @briemens

    @briemens

    Ай бұрын

    Having worked on a KnockoutJS project myself for many years (2014 - 2018), this was exactly my thought 😄

  • @CatOnBox
    @CatOnBoxАй бұрын

    First of all, I've subscribed because I really enjoy your manner of delivering content. However, for the longest time, I was trying to figure out where I know you from and then it hit me. Has anyone ever told you you look like Lalo's (from Better Call Saul / Breaking Bad) healthier younger brother? I can't unsee it now! Thank you for the content, your channel is awesome!

  • @zaidkureshi5655

    @zaidkureshi5655

    Ай бұрын

    lalo lite

  • @elirane85
    @elirane85Ай бұрын

    I've been writing "reactive" code especially for TCP/RPC servers for almost a decade using libs like rxjs and kefirjs. Nice of them to finally make it a first class citizen :P

  • @MichaelKire
    @MichaelKireАй бұрын

    If there’s anything I want in a codebase, its readability. I feel like this signals goes against this. Theres nothing that tells you what updates when and thus is waaaay too magic.

  • @offlercrocgod

    @offlercrocgod

    Ай бұрын

    Do a find all references on the variable. It's trivial.

  • @japie8466

    @japie8466

    Ай бұрын

    Sideeffects all over the place…

  • @stroiman.development
    @stroiman.developmentАй бұрын

    Sounds really exciting. As having build a lot of React code with Redux for state management (which is a pattern I love - partly because I can separate the complexity where it's easy to test), I also know that there are some pitfalls, e.g. make sure you write your selectors in a way that doesn't cause unnecessary rerendering, or expensive recomputations, when the relevant part of the state didn't change. The latter often involves the use of `createSelector`, but that is often also used incorrectly. It appears that Signals will solve these issues, allowing you to create the state selection more declaratively without worrying about the pitfalls, due to the buildin memoization. Imagine if we could bind to a signal in the JSX code direct, so maybe a signal update doesn't need to trigger rerendering the entire component, but just imperatively set that attribute.

  • @guillaumebrunerie

    @guillaumebrunerie

    Ай бұрын

    That is exactly what SolidJS is doing, check it out!

  • @offlercrocgod

    @offlercrocgod

    Ай бұрын

    Check out legend-state

  • @hahnkev
    @hahnkevАй бұрын

    that overview was really good, I always assumed signals was just rxjs sugar and was just going to run into the same problems we had with knockout.js now I see how awesome signals are compared to that. Cool!

  • @IanZamojc
    @IanZamojcАй бұрын

    I always kind of figured this was the job of the Proxy object that JS already has and Vue uses as part of its reactivity. Still, I'll take it.

  • @jhonyhndoea

    @jhonyhndoea

    Ай бұрын

    yup, redux also uses it. when I roll some vanilla state management solution, I usually go with a proxy.

  • @shadeblackwolf1508
    @shadeblackwolf1508Ай бұрын

    This is looks like an excellent functional solution to private state. The same problem why OO languages always give the advice: don't pick values off your data objects, pass the data objects

  • @wahoobeans
    @wahoobeansАй бұрын

    Signals is just a rebranding of reactive programming to make rxjs seem more friendly and approachable to devs.

  • @HoNow222

    @HoNow222

    Ай бұрын

    how?

  • @psychomonk2443

    @psychomonk2443

    Ай бұрын

    Rxjs is loaded with crap complexity, because it couldn't come up with smth js-native. Signals fixed that to some extent.

  • @ghostinplainsight4803

    @ghostinplainsight4803

    Ай бұрын

    RXJS has everything it needs for the flexibility it requires for the complexity of the websites that use it. In most sites you will only use map, and mergeMap to transform the values inside of Observables, fairly easy ideas to grasp. But the core concept is very simple. Think of it like a Promise that can be triggered multiple times. It should have been added a long time ago, while leaving users/library creators to create operators for more complex uses.

  • @nUrnxvmhTEuU

    @nUrnxvmhTEuU

    Ай бұрын

    RxJS is glitching by default, and that is terrible and leads to many bugs (at least in our production app it did), which are hard to debug and tedious to fix. Non-glitching signals are a *significant* improvement on Rx observables.

  • @JohnyMorte

    @JohnyMorte

    Ай бұрын

    @@nUrnxvmhTEuU can you please tell us more about that "glitching"? I'm using RxJS for ~5years now and I had many problems with it... But EVERY time it was my mistake or missunderstoodment on some concepts/operators. But I must agree that debugging it is very hard.. And also the documentation is... you know. :D

  • @MrGarkin
    @MrGarkinАй бұрын

    Fokcenk pipe operator, dear committee, pretty please. Is it too much to ask? How much was it, 10 years?

  • @mattmmilli8287
    @mattmmilli8287Ай бұрын

    I used signals to link up imperative side with react recently and it’s a dream (: it’s a little hard to follow them around but I predict we will get a tool that visualizes signal connections

  • @anthonyortiz7924
    @anthonyortiz7924Ай бұрын

    I’ve worked in an environment where this type of acyclic graph dependency triggering behavior led to serious performance issues and unmaintainable spaghetti code where it’s so hard to debug due to having to figure out what triggered something when you’re 10 levels of indirection away from the trigger and a million sources to wade through.

  • @ArneBab
    @ArneBabАй бұрын

    Looks interesting. Signals and Slots worked really well when I used them in Qt, so they may work well here, too. If they are kept simple.

  • @vaisakhkm783

    @vaisakhkm783

    Ай бұрын

    I always felt model-view arch to make more sense in qt, yet it was always pain to work with in practice... signals ftw

  • @sledgex9
    @sledgex9Ай бұрын

    Finally the Web-devs discover what the Desktop UI devs knew decades now from frameworks like Gtk and Qt (and also Boost.Signals2 too).

  • @disguysn

    @disguysn

    Ай бұрын

    Just about every major advance in JS frameworks seems to be inspired by native frameworks...

  • @cocoscacao6102

    @cocoscacao6102

    Ай бұрын

    No, it's innovation, dammit!!!!

  • @theblckbird

    @theblckbird

    Ай бұрын

    @cocoscacao6102 That‘s irony, right? If so: :]

  • @W1ngSMC

    @W1ngSMC

    Ай бұрын

    But Qt signals & slots aren't like this. They are literally just events and consumers. Without memoization, lazy evaluation, ... and all the good stuff detailed here.

  • @sledgex9

    @sledgex9

    Ай бұрын

    @@W1ngSMC Singal/slot embodies the core idea behind JS signals: very precise, efficient, fast reactivity. The other things (memoization, lazy evaluation etc) can be implemented on top of that.

  • @Kauto
    @KautoАй бұрын

    Wow, looks like Knockout. There it was called Observables. I loved these functions. They are very intuitiv. Great to see them as a tool in JS and thus in other frameworks.

  • @NicolasEmbleton
    @NicolasEmbletonАй бұрын

    Rob Eisenberg is awesome. DurandalJS and AureliaJS are his babies (along with the community) and are / were awesome frameworks.

  • @extracted225
    @extracted225Ай бұрын

    So does this steal react-forget’s thunder? Should react support and promote signals over hooks?

  • @AndrewTaylorPhD
    @AndrewTaylorPhDАй бұрын

    I guess my main question here is, how does it know? I mean, without React-style [dependency, arrays]? I get that a new language primitive could have the compiler examine the passed in function to see what's closured in and check if any of them are Signals, but a polyfill could never do that, so how could that work? The only way I can think of is to just evaluate everything every time and if the value hasn't changed, don't fire any of the events. But that won't really work for effects like x=> [x] because the new array won't equal the old one. I've had a look at the polyfill code and there is some tree management in there, but I didn't find anything that could really tell when something changes like this

  • @Luxalpa

    @Luxalpa

    Ай бұрын

    It works the same way as it has in VueJS since at least 7 years and it's surprisingly simple. You run the function in the initial setup, and each call to `get()` registers the signal with the function. So for example effect(() => `console.log(myvalue.get()))` would initially log the value, and the call to "get()" would setup this lambda function to rerun the next time any call to `myvalue.set()` is being made (more or less). When it reruns the function it erases the tracking and registers all the get()'s again, that's why things like if-conditions still work. However, there are ways to also set up effects without running them first, in which case you would need to provide the signals as dependencies just like in Reacts use_effect.

  • @AndrewTaylorPhD

    @AndrewTaylorPhD

    Ай бұрын

    @@Luxalpa oh man that's clever 😄

  • @nerdcave0
    @nerdcave0Ай бұрын

    One of the best things about signals is how it can completely simplify application state management.

  • @mrmagnetic927
    @mrmagnetic927Ай бұрын

    Definitely OVERHYPED MADNESS. thanks Theo.

  • @Gamesaucer
    @GamesaucerАй бұрын

    A nice and declarative way to optimise data trees, I like it! It probably does still need some iteration, but the concept sounds great. Something this doesn't seem to supposed is parameterised signals. I don't know _how_ you'd support that in a performant way, but it would be nice to be able to call something like `const a_or_b = (x, y) => a(x, y) || b(x, y)` in a performant way. Memoising something like that seems like a pain though, so I don't really want to open that can of worms, especially since I haven't yet run into a use case complex enough where performance is a major issue for chains of computations like that.

  • @Luxalpa

    @Luxalpa

    Ай бұрын

    no, it's pretty simple, you just use an object or a tuple (array?) I guess. Been a while since I used JavaScript but in Rust I just use Tuples and Structs as the parameter type, it's just like having multiple parameters.

  • @Gamesaucer

    @Gamesaucer

    Ай бұрын

    @@Luxalpa You mean a map of arrays representing the provided arguments? That doesn't work because Array isn't a value type, so they'll never compare as equal and you'll never be able to find anything in the map.

  • @zaripych
    @zaripychАй бұрын

    All of the same seem to be achievable to me via RxJS. With RxJS you can do push via subject.next and you can do pull via observable.subscribe ... a UI component can subscribe/unsubscribe to an observable and will cause computation it builds on only when that observable is subscribed to. With RxJS you also get teardown support and a bunch of powerful operators. Composability is amazing with RxJS. Unfortunately it's too complicated for people who used to imperative code. Signals seem to be easier to use.

  • @andreiovidiubucurei9984

    @andreiovidiubucurei9984

    Ай бұрын

    Technically you can achieve with Rx Subjects what Signals are trying to achieve but I think you will have to do all the optimizations yourself: manage subscriptions between streams, use distinctUntilChanged, combineLatest, avoid unnecessary computations by unsubscribing from upstream dependencies when a computed Subject does not have any subscribers.

  • @brennan123
    @brennan123Ай бұрын

    I wonder if it is actually going to be composable with higher order functions and adding your own abstractions on top of it or if it is going to do some kind of chaining syntax that basically that really difficult to do and you're stuck only working at the lower level of abstractions.

  • @judgewest2000
    @judgewest2000Ай бұрын

    This is LITERALLY how KnockoutJS works since 2010. Variables are all basically functions in which you can subscribe to including computed fields, which makes data model binding to the UI just insanely easy. I moved onto React which meant a mindset shift to one way binding, looks like I need dust off those old parts of my brain once again.

  • @PerMejdal
    @PerMejdalАй бұрын

    So signals works the same way as a spreadsheet.

  • @Z4KIUS
    @Z4KIUSАй бұрын

    push then pull looks like the mobile carriers email service in the olden days, they had special protocols to push the info that something happened but when you actually wanted to view the message you had to pull it on demand (due to the costs back then) don't think anyone outside of Japan really used it but it was specced at least

  • @michaelutech4786
    @michaelutech4786Ай бұрын

    What would make this truly awesome would be support for transactions, or more specifically the possibility to defer triggering dirtying/reevaluation/triggering of effects until a set of changes is complete (a transaction is committed). Especially if it properly works with nested transactions and configurable isolation. If that would be supported with good performance, it would make me want to go back to web development 🙂

  • @elhaambasheerch7058
    @elhaambasheerch7058Ай бұрын

    Probably one of the most wisest proposals in a while.

  • @Alec.Vision
    @Alec.VisionАй бұрын

    Oh sh- signals is the primitive I've been needing for a long-stale issue. Whether or not this lands, this video solved my problem 😅 My last attempt used observables, so I was close.

  • @Fs3i
    @Fs3iАй бұрын

    The one thing that worries me is lists. Quite often, I do pass around lists of things, and arrays are - in JS land - quite often *weird*. If I use a signal, and my computed value is [...someSignal.value.map(a => !a)] (Inverting some booleans for whatever reason), when is it considered equal? Is it considered equal if the object reference is the same? But that might be dangerous, because then I can push to an array, and, well, nothing has changed. This is a problem reactive libraries like mobx try to solve, but it's actually not trivial. I can forsee quite a few footguns when working with arrays in either direction.

  • @aaronevans7713

    @aaronevans7713

    Ай бұрын

    And then marking object hierarchies dirty because one of one nested value. Perf goes crash!

  • @dminik9196

    @dminik9196

    Ай бұрын

    Regular arrays would presumably only be compared referentially. There is another proposal for structural equality. It adds records (which are essentially immutable objects) and tuples (immutable arrays). Look up "JavaScript Records & Tuples Proposal" if you're interested.

  • @NikosTechDowntime
    @NikosTechDowntimeАй бұрын

    oh i will immediately start using this in my vanilla stuff

  • @pufosme
    @pufosmeАй бұрын

    does this mean the Computed() is evaluating the function passed to it ? How does it know , if its dependent of something that is also in the signal ? Or the magic happends in the .get() function on the 1st run

  • @chaos_monster
    @chaos_monsterАй бұрын

    You can use the initial/ current polyfill in production by using Angular :P - jokes aside the current polyfil is based on the signal primitive that was written in Angular to be shared with WIZ

  • @gabrieljose7041
    @gabrieljose7041Ай бұрын

    I do think that the web needs a standard way to deal with reactivity, but it must be done with caution, if the api is poor and not extensible, it can became something that people choose to create its own than using the default. Btw, it is funny that I too have a UI/Components library that uses an implementation of signals, if someone wants to see is lithen-fns in npm and @lithen/fns in jsr

  • @thenetknight
    @thenetknightАй бұрын

    Hi, what would this mean for Redux and similar state management libraries?

  • @danielugbeye2545
    @danielugbeye2545Ай бұрын

    Great stuff! If this happens, Javascript will become the new Javascriot framework

  • @kristianlavigne8270
    @kristianlavigne8270Ай бұрын

    Also looking forward to the pipe operator some day…

  • @statuschannel8572
    @statuschannel8572Ай бұрын

    meanwhile i'm waiting for Temporal API for the last 2 years!

  • @ea_naseer

    @ea_naseer

    Ай бұрын

    dude I'm not the only one.

  • @MatthewDeaners
    @MatthewDeanersАй бұрын

    Two thoughts: 1. We already had Observable as a proposal, which is essentially this. That flopped, how will this be different? 2. DOM values should be assignable to signals without an effect function, such that the value is auto-subscribed to the signal value.

  • @youjean83
    @youjean83Ай бұрын

    Web-Components plus signals will be lots of fun. Can't wait to teleport templates around. Though, in my opinion, the way we write Web-Components needs to improve. It feels cumbersome.

  • @gro967
    @gro967Ай бұрын

    So they want to bring Vue’s reactivity model to JS, sounds good to me 😅

  • @studiousllama4776
    @studiousllama4776Ай бұрын

    Super excited for this, but it's interesting that the rendering/effect aspect of signals hasn't been included in the proposal (see 14:17). While I get why, it does kind of make this proposal feel like an incomplete implementation rather than true "signals" the way we've come to understand them. I wonder if effects will be added at some point in the future?

  • @LusidDreaming
    @LusidDreamingАй бұрын

    Bitwise isEven as opposed to modulus. Big brain move right there.

  • @radvilardian740
    @radvilardian740Ай бұрын

    i want to note that, signal is not really a lazy value, because it retains it's value in the memory unlike the observables.

  • @hohohomeboy
    @hohohomeboyАй бұрын

    I don’t know about the actual implementation, but that’s sounds like vue.js

  • @mirovilkki6796
    @mirovilkki679618 күн бұрын

    No.. no.. nooooo. The amount of spaghetti incoming is wild, they didn’t learn from times when observers and rxjs etc were the coolest things. Keep it as a library.

  • @nixoncode
    @nixoncodeАй бұрын

    Perhaps sometimes soon, i'll write my own js framework and call it eventJS, or actionJs if that’s already taken

  • @InternetKilledTV21
    @InternetKilledTV21Ай бұрын

    import { ref, computed } from "vue"; const counter = ref(0) ; const isEven = computed(() => (counter.value & 1) == 0); const parity = computed(() => isEven.value ? "even" : "odd"); but vanilla, and apparently fairly intelligent :D I need to see a good example of a server app, though.

  • @jackmiller5299
    @jackmiller5299Ай бұрын

    Imagine the implicit mutations that's not trackable where you can mutate a signal in a different file and it triggers a bunch of changes in many others.

  • @Trekiros
    @TrekirosАй бұрын

    Interoperability would be SO GOOD for the web. I would have already switched to Solid if not for the fact that so many of the react libraries I use don't have a good equivalent in the Solid/Start ecosystem (e.g. clerk, trpc, react-pdf, react-markdown, sonner, etc)

  • @alfonsan
    @alfonsanАй бұрын

    Subtle is a latin word, in spanish is "sutil", and has the same meaning. In french is "Subtile" and I believe the meaning remains almost the same. What I don't know is what happens with non latin languages, but I guess it should not have much trouble for a wide variety of the audience. But the english spanish and french world have no problem.

  • @Dorchwoods
    @DorchwoodsАй бұрын

    One thing in trying to wrap my brain around is using a const for those derived/computed signals. Feels weird since you're indicating it peobably will change at some point 🤔

  • @baka_baca

    @baka_baca

    Ай бұрын

    const foo = { bar: 'baz' }; foo['bar'] = 'foobar'; To me it makes as much sense as this. foo never changes here as it always points to the same reference in memory. A signal might point to an address in memory and the value at that address can change constantly without ever changing the address itself.

  • @bryangomez5951
    @bryangomez5951Ай бұрын

    You know what is another thing that is coming to js, native observables. Well have rxjs on js, the proposal is already on its way to being merged and whats better is that is the same creator of rxjs that made this posible. Another win for angular.

  • @JacobSantosDev

    @JacobSantosDev

    Ай бұрын

    That is good news. I would use the hell out of RxJS if it was native.

  • @ghostinplainsight4803

    @ghostinplainsight4803

    Ай бұрын

    Only another 9 years to go.

  • @HyuLilium

    @HyuLilium

    Ай бұрын

    Sounds quite bad. I remember working with rxjs in angular 2-4 and it was a lot of unnecessary and complex boilerplate. Happy that nobody tried to force rxjs into react.

  • @JacobSantosDev

    @JacobSantosDev

    Ай бұрын

    @@HyuLilium jQuery lit the fire for browsers to support querySelector API. RxJS as a concept with streaming is awesome. The Proxy object was neat in what it allowed RxJS and other libraries to do with watching updates. The ability that some languages have with being able to watch and trigger updates when values change is intriguing and could be useful. It is crazy with how much JS is event-driven that something like RxJS isn't just native.

  • @climatechangedoesntbargain9140

    @climatechangedoesntbargain9140

    Ай бұрын

    @@HyuLilium what boilerplate?

  • @AntonAdelson
    @AntonAdelsonАй бұрын

    Question: how does isEven know that counter is its source? By that I mean how does it know to recalculate itself when counter becomes dirty? In the definition I see no explicit definition of counter as source for isEven: isEven =new Signal.Computed( ()=> !(counter.get()&1 )

  • @IB-hn4vy
    @IB-hn4vyАй бұрын

    this was years ago in ember.js with computed decorator, or later on with tracked decorator, albeit on the class level.

  • @Ebiko
    @EbikoАй бұрын

    (Edit: I switched up Signal and event in my understanding of this, so i mean events, not signals.) React is seriously missing good signals. If you have components that are not connected to each other, like in completely different branches of the component tree, and you need to pass data, you dont want the complete branch to be rerendered based on one small change. Thus there is a need to have a communication possibility beyond your branch.

  • @blenderpanzi
    @blenderpanziАй бұрын

    Is that what Xerox had in the 70ies? And Qt since the 90ies?

  • @tdp-pop6810
    @tdp-pop6810Ай бұрын

    Nobody understands more about Signals today than Ryan Carniatto, the SolidJS author. It's a pitty that he was not invited to contribute.

  • @devagr

    @devagr

    Ай бұрын

    He is a part of the proposal lol, he has been contributing a lot

  • @tdp-pop6810

    @tdp-pop6810

    Ай бұрын

    @@devagr His name is not even in the list of contributors.

  • @muchirajunior9751
    @muchirajunior9751Ай бұрын

    This is awesome

  • @jaysonbunnell8097
    @jaysonbunnell8097Ай бұрын

    C users with "voltatile": Look what they need to mimick a fraction of my power!

  • @Dorff_Meister
    @Dorff_MeisterАй бұрын

    Really cool stuff.

  • @elfensky
    @elfenskyАй бұрын

    But experience wise it seems similar to using react context? You still need to import it everywhere you wanna use it, and you can then import sinks and sources in the same component.

  • @atechdude
    @atechdudeАй бұрын

    I made a comment on a previous video you did but not sure if you read all your comments. I was wondering if you could do a video on your thoughts, if any, on Blazor.

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