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What is your prefered language for website dev? I wanna start making my own website but im at a blank point on this side of developing ? :)

Comments
  • 24
    XML for the frontend. Assembly for the backend
  • 5
    Frontend: for now nothing special just JavaScript and the norm HTML5

    Backend: PHP or C#
  • 8
    Frontend: Vanilla JS or React
    Backend: .net with c#
  • 7
    Frontend: emojicode

    Backend: emojicode
  • 6
  • 1
  • 5
    Frontend: emacs

    Backend: css
  • 2
    On a serious note...

    Backend: PHP
    Front end: Vanilla - JS + CSS
  • 1
    frontend: htx
    backend: idc
  • 3
    If you have no idea where to start, start with static HTML. Getting presentation tight is half the battle these days. Easy to host, instant gratification end of the stack, and you will probably naturally gravitate towards particular backed tech as your particular needs grow.
  • 2
    WebAssembly would make your site rocket fast.
  • 2
    Backend - laravel
    Frontend - angular
  • 2
    Laravel
  • 2
    Front end - use whatever the tomorrows trend is or risk being ridiculed

    Back end - golang with an nginx reverse proxy
  • 0
    Php and a bit js backend(ik, don't judge, it gets the job done) html css or front 🤷‍♂️
  • 0
    Backend: Django
    Frontend: Vanilla JS (Will try react in future)
  • 0
    frontend: Microsoft word
    backend: VBA
  • 3
    Frontend: Vue
    Backend: Golang
  • 0
    Guys, how do we know this needs a backend?
    Can't it be static?

    Static site generator: pelican
    Or
    Html templates: html5up
    Or
    CSS framework: skeleton
  • 0
  • 0
    @ajit555 i just did a quick search on this, sounds interesting, especially as im going to study the C languages soon.

    Is that for backend and then combo with HTML or something like that on front end ?
  • 1
    @BitByteBoolean It was a joke :) I have no knowledge about Webassembly but it's potential seems to be compute intensive jobs in Browser, like games, in-browser databases, browser related programming itself, since Webassembly is running C/C++ code in browser natively. However, JS is much more successful due to its overall ecosystem of developers, tooling, plugins/packages, which JS has decades of maturity. For web applications / website development, JS is going to stay, may be a tiny portion of compute intensive work, might get ported to Webassembly.
  • 0
    @ajit555 webassembly is not running C/C++ code, it's running machine code
  • 0
    @mjones44 u r right, it's binary compiled from c/c++/rust, which runs in browser.
  • 1
    @ajit555 technically it's just a small subset of JavaScript which can be just-in-time compiled to machine code
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