vertex.js is a single, self-contained file with no build step and no dependencies.
Also exhibits the curious quality of being faster than over a decade of engineering at Facebook in some cases: https://files.catbox.moe/sqei0d.png
Vertex is faster in 2 tests (12% and 32%), and slower in 2 other tests (149% and 200%). Very curious wording on the OP when react is an order of magnitude faster than vertex in some cases.
What's the use case for mixing them?
You can read https://lukeb42.github.io/vertex-interop.html for more info.
We could remove 3kb by removing the router but that's not gonna happen. You're more than welcome to minify+brotli it yourself if you use vertex.js in production.
Yes, and every other flavor too. "Developers" isn't a single hive-mind entity, and there are many different purposes for javascript, and many different kinds of systems where javascript can be used.
By my own extensive testing[1], it's optimal at minimum 18px, you're at 13.5px.
[1]: https://github.com/Diablo-D3/dotfiles/blob/master/fontsizes....
(“Courier”, as provided by macOS, is fine. But Courier New is irredeemably bad.)
Concerning font-family declarations, if you’re doing something like `"Courier New", Courier, monospace`—please just write `monospace`.
(I’m not going to address the font size.)
A modern typeface like IBM Plex Mono [1] or Office Code Pro [2] that offers more weights and can still render nicely at 10px size would be a better choice, maintaining the same aesthetic.
The predominant monitor in existence is your average 24" 1080p monitor, sat at, on average, 32" away from the head. The average person has worse than 20/20 vision.
You must test your website in such conditions and make sure it is readable, and also make sure it meets at minimum WCAG A, but preferably the whole way to AAA if possible.
I don't know in what world that makes any sense. Or why someone would want to "fit code" in their head...
edit: I just noticed a newer comment from OP saying that changed the font size.