Depending on your needs, it's still perfectly reasonable to write plain old Vanilla JavaScript and include it in the page using a <script> tag. You can eventually replace it with some of these powerful but complicated tools as long as your original code isn't pure spaghetti.
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Depending on your needs, it's still perfectly reasonable to write plain old Vanilla JavaScript and include it in the page using a
<script>
tag. You can eventually replace it with some of these powerful but complicated tools as long as your original code isn't pure spaghetti.