Yes, I know. A little bit of controversy in the title of this post could have triggered your attention. But hear me out. I think that the pull request model is a good fit for open source development where people are working in their spare time on projects and want to design, collaborate and review in the open before accepting changes. I don't want to go in too much detail, so if you want to learn more about this model, check out the documentation on Github or the Atlassian BitBucket website. Let me focus on the reason when and why I don’t like to use pull requests. I don’t think they are a good fit for dedicated software development teams working in close collaboration fulltime on the same codebase. In these teams I see pull requests used as a quality control mechanism allowing another (senior) developer to review the changes before approving them and pushing them to the master branch. Pull requests are not a good fit for dedicated software development teams working in c
Bootstrap 5 is the first Bootstrap version that no longer has a dependency on jQuery. Of course some plugins and components still require vanilla JavaScript to function but none of them require jQuery. The Bootstrap framework , originally developed and open-sourced by Twitter, has been an indispensable tool for web developers. It provides a ready-to-use set of UI components and a grid system essential for adaptive web pages that need to display well across PC and mobile browsers. Since its inception, Bootstrap has always had a dependency on the jQuery framework. The jQuery framework , originally created in 2006, is one of the most popular JavaScript frameworks of all time. It provides powerful language features and cross-browser compatibility in an era when web technologies are going through many challenges and experimentations to support a variety of use cases ranging from interactive web pages, single-page apps, AJAX requests, and mobile web apps. With JavaScript standards and