24 Feb 2026
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Oxfmt Beta: A Fast, Rust-Powered JavaScript Code Formatter - A 100% Prettier-compatible JavaScript code formatter (and sister project of Oxlint) that boasts being 30x faster than Prettier and 3x faster than Biome. Since the alpha, it now supports embedded language formatting (JSX, YAML, HTML, etc), Tailwind CSS class sorting, import sorting, and more.
Boshen, Dunqing, and Sugiura (VoidZero)
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FlexGrid by Wijmo: The Industry-Leading JavaScript Datagrid - A fast and flexible DataGrid for building modern web apps. Key features and virtualized rendering are included in the core grid module. Pick & choose special features to keep your app small. Built for JavaScript, extended to Angular, React, and Vue.
Wijmo From MESCIUS sponsor
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Halving Node.js Memory Usage with Pointer Compression - Cloudflare, Igalia, and the Node project have collaborated on node-caged, a Node.js 25 Docker image with V8 pointer compression enabled, yielding up to 50% memory savings. Matteo digs into all the details.
Matteo Collina
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OpenSeadragon 6.0: A Web Viewer for High Resolution Images - A big step forward for a project that's almost 15 years old, and one of few stable, trusty options for rendering ultra-high resolution images for users to zoom into and pan around. Version 6 introduces a new async and cache-managed pipeline, making it far more efficient at scale.
OpenSeadragon Contributors
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π‘ OpenSeadragon was recently used as the basis for the Isometric NYC (well worth reading about in its own right!) project.
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β³ Slowmo: Slow Down, Pause, or Speed Up Time - A tool you can use either as a library or browser extension that slows down time in the browser for debugging and testing purposes. It slows down numerous things including CSS animations, transitions, and requestAnimationFrame.
Francois Laberge
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π‘ Angular Doctor is a similar project for Angular apps inspired by React Doctor.
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π JSNation | the key web dev conference | June 11 & 15. Don't miss out - 50+ talks, 1.5K devs to connect, Amsterdam vibes, & global access.
ExβPalantir engineers built Meticulous, an E2E UI testing tool that automatically covers every edge case, boosting product quality and development speed.
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π’ Elsewhere in the ecosystem
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24 Feb 2026 12:00am GMT
17 Feb 2026
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π‘ Being in alpha, the focus in the docs is on React for now, but it's not React only, and they're looking for help with Solid, Angular, Svelte, and Vue adapters.
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Still Writing Tests Manually? Meticulous AI Is Here - Notion, Dropbox, Wiz, and LaunchDarkly have found a new testing paradigm - and they can't imagine working without it. Built by ex-Palantir engineers, Meticulous autonomously creates a continuously evolving suite of E2E UI tests that delivers near-exhaustive coverage with zero developer effort.
Meticulous sponsor
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Experiments with CodeMirror - CodeMirror is one of the most robust code editor components out there (we've just used it while rebuilding our newsletter editor!) and it's very extensible too, as seen in this walkthrough of building a VSCode-like 'change review' feature for it.
Antonio De Lucreziis
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How to Make an HTTP Request in Node.js - A comprehensive guide to using fetch in production, tackling timeouts, streaming requests and responses, retries, concurrency, mocking, and more. Most of this is useful in the broader JavaScript context.
Luciano Mammino
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Console Ninja: Inline Logs & Smarter Debugging - See console output, runtime data, and errors next to your code, shared with your AI. Rethought, redesigned, and rebuilt in v2 for faster JavaScript debugging workflows.
Wallaby Team sponsor
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π Perspective 4.2 - Interactive analytics and data viz component for large/streaming datasets.
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Dockview 5.0 - Zero dependency layout manager supporting tabs, groups, grids, and split views.
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βοΈ Stockfish.js 18 - A WASM port of the Stockfish chess engine you can use from JavaScript.
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Ohm 17.5 - Parsing toolkit for building parsers, interpreters, etc.
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π’ Elsewhere in the ecosystem
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π¨ Three years ago we linked to DPaint.JS, a web based image editor modeled after the legendary 1980s Amiga and PC graphics editor Deluxe Paint. Many side projects like this fizzle out, but not DPaint! v0.2.0 has been released after two years with support for animations, pen support, texture brushes, and more.
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almostnode is an experimental project that brings a Node.js runtime environment into the browser. The demo on the homepage is neat.
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π Data from over 100,000 sites was boiled down into this useful report on modern CSS usage. The median number of CSS rules per site was 2,802, with one page somehow using 210,695 rules!
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πΉοΈ Not content to just port Quake to run in the browser, the creator of Three.js has now attempted a Descent port too (source).
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π€ Can you recreate something like SQLite with a swarm of agents? Kian Kyars had a try, as part of an agent coordination experiment.
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Cloudflare is rolling out a feature to allow agents to fetch Markdown directly from Cloudflare-powered sites.
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17 Feb 2026 12:00am GMT
10 Feb 2026
The Most Loved JavaScript Course Year After Year - JavaScript: The Hard Parts is rated 4.92 on average by thousands of developers. Build real mental models for how JavaScript works, from execution context and closures to async behavior and modern language features.
Frontend Masters sponsor
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ESLint v10.0.0 Released - This long-awaited milestone completes the removal of the legacy eslintrc config system, introduces a new config lookup algorithm that starts from the linted file (great for monorepos), adds JSX reference tracking to fix scope analysis issues, and more.
ESLint Team
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RELEASES:
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π€ Transformers.js v4 Preview - Run ML models in the browser on top of a new WebGPU runtime.
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Bun v1.3.9 - Run multiple package.json scripts concurrently/sequentially with --parallel/--sequential, faster Bun.markdown.react(), regexps get a SIMD boost, and more.
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Ink 6.7 - Build rich terminal apps with React. v6.7 adds concurrent rendering and synchronized updates (less flicker!)
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Ember 6.10 - Cleanups and modernization for the stable, battle-tested framework.
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πNotion, Dropbox, Wiz, and LaunchDarkly have switched to Meticulous for frontend tests that provide near-exhaustive coverage with zero developer effort. Find out why.
πΈ Add robust 1D/2D barcode scanning to your web app with STRICH. Easy integration, simple pricing. Free trial and demo app available.
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π’ Elsewhere in the ecosystem
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10 Feb 2026 12:00am GMT
03 Feb 2026
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Four Heavyweights Drop Updates
Four stalwarts of the JavaScript ecosystem all shipped notable releases this week, and odds are you're using at least one of them:
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βοΈ How Not to Parse Numbers in JavaScript - Why use a proper locale-aware API to parse numbers when you can hand-roll a maze of string splits, separator swaps, and implicit type coercions that silently break on edge cases?
Remy Porter (The Daily WTF)
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Explicit Resource Management in JavaScript - You can use using for deterministic cleanup, calling Symbol.dispose/asyncDispose at scope exit without try/finally. A small fix for leaks and forgotten teardowns in streams, observers, locks, and similar APIs.
Matt Smith
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The History of C# and TypeScript with Anders Hejlsberg - GitHub interviewed the creator of both C# and TypeScript about his career, why TypeScript was created in the first place, some internal Microsoft politics, as well as the ongoing Go port of the TypeScript compiler. There's a video of the full interview, as well as 'seven learnings' boiled down in written form.
GitHub
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Tsonic: A TypeScript to C# Transpiler - The idea is for creating native executables that run on .NET. I've not tested it as I'm not in that ecosystem but it's an interesting idea.
Jeswin
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π’ Elsewhere in the ecosystem
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Some other interesting tidbits in the broader landscape:
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03 Feb 2026 12:00am GMT
18 Jan 2026
On January 14, 2006, John Resig introduced a JavaScript library called jQuery at BarCamp in New York City. Now, 20 years later, the jQuery team is happy to announce the final release of jQuery 4.0.0. After a long development cycle and several pre-releases, jQuery 4.0.0 brings many improvements and modernizations. It is the first major β¦ Continue reading β
18 Jan 2026 12:29am GMT
11 Aug 2025
It's here! Almost. jQuery 4.0.0-rc.1 is now available. It's our way of saying, "we think this is ready; now poke it with many sticks". If nothing is found that requires a second release candidate, jQuery 4.0.0 final will follow. Please try out this release and let us know if you encounter any issues. A 4.0 β¦ Continue reading β
11 Aug 2025 5:35pm GMT
17 Jul 2024
Last February, we released the first beta of jQuery 4.0.0. We're now ready to release a second, and we expect a release candidate to come soonβ’. This release comes with a major rewrite to jQuery's testing infrastructure, which removed all deprecated or under-supported dependencies. But the main change that warranted a second beta was a β¦ Continue reading β
17 Jul 2024 2:03pm GMT
17 Apr 2024
jQuery's influence on the web will always be evident. When it was first introduced in 2006, jQuery became a fundamental tool for web developers almost immediately. It simplified JavaScript programming, making it easier to manipulate HTML documents, handle events, perform animations, and much more. Since then, it has played and continues to play a major β¦ Continue reading β
17 Apr 2024 5:00pm GMT
06 Feb 2024
jQuery 4.0.0 has been in the works for a long time, but it is now ready for a beta release! There's a lot to cover, and the team is excited to see it released. We've got bug fixes, performance improvements, and some breaking changes. We removed support for IE<11 after all! Still, we expect disruption β¦ Continue reading β
06 Feb 2024 4:43pm GMT
28 Aug 2023
jQuery 3.7.1 has been released! This release fixes a regression from jQuery 3.6.0 that resulted in rounded dimensions for <tr /> elements in Chrome and Safari. Also, a (mostly) internal Sizzle method, jQuery.find.tokenize that was on the jQuery object was accidentally removed when we removed Sizzle in jQuery 3.7.0. That method has been restored. As β¦ Continue reading β
28 Aug 2023 1:40pm GMT
11 May 2023
jQuery 3.7.0 is now available! This release has it all: bug fixes, a new method, and a performance improvement! We even dropped our longtime selector engine: Sizzle. Or, I should say, we moved it into jQuery. jQuery no longer depends on Sizzle as a separate project, but has instead dropped its code directly into jQuery β¦ Continue reading β
11 May 2023 6:38pm GMT
08 Mar 2023
If you've been following along with recent jQuery releases, we have been working on how to address the recent addition of some new selectors in browsers, especially :has. jQuery 3.6.3 settled on the strategy of using native CSS.supports to determined whether a selector should be passed directly to querySelectorAll or instead go through jQuery's selector β¦ Continue reading β
08 Mar 2023 3:52pm GMT
20 Dec 2022
Last week, we released jQuery 3.6.2. There were several changes in that release, but the most important one addressed an issue with some new selectors introduced in most browsers, like :has(). We wanted to release jQuery 3.6.3 quickly because an issue was reported that revealed a problem with our original fix. More details on that β¦ Continue reading β
20 Dec 2022 9:35pm GMT
13 Dec 2022
You probably weren't expecting another release so soon, but jQuery 3.6.2 has arrived! The main impetus for this release was the introduction of some new selectors in Chrome. More on that below. As usual, the release is available on our cdn and the npm package manager. Other third party CDNs will probably have it soon β¦ Continue reading β
13 Dec 2022 3:13pm GMT