The smartest thing about this post is the point he makes about developers re-evaluating their tool chain at the end of each project. Anyone who makes tools needs to keep that in mind.
I completely do that - and it's how I ended up using (and loving) jQuery. Of course, it makes going back to work on old projects a drag and inspires a lot of (too much?) refactoring.
I completely do that - and it's how I ended up using (and loving) jQuery. Of course, it makes going back to work on old projects a drag and inspires a lot of (too much?) refactoring.