TweedyImpertinence
Always, but I’m a former Googler, so performance was always a huge concern with each and every frontend change we made.
Rendering something to a page without errors should be the starting goal, where you then shift focus to readability, accessibility, maintainability, interoperability - all that other stuff that actually matters more but is opaque to users - but in most cases, it’s the end goal, and all that other stuff isn’t considered at all.
IMO, the web would be a lot better if frontend devs spent more time learning how to use their tools instead of logging everything to the console.
Also, John Oliver’s Twitter feed is just him posting pictures of himself for others to post on Reddit.
https://twitter.com/iamjohnoliver/status/1670179738348933120