One of the most useful features that could make a lot of incremental computation problems easier is "value types"[1], but unfortunately it seems that isn't going to happen anytime soon. The biggest constraint when developing an efficient UI framework with good DX is JavaScript. Also, it would be nice to have `Node.prototype.insertAfter()` :)
for perf, s/JavaScript/DOM, i think.
good DX comes from ecosystem and amount of time invested in making good tooling. JSX would be a non-starter without IDEs helping autocomplete, linting/format, syntax coloring, and webpack/babel to do the compilation.
tagged templates could reach at least the same level of DX as JSX if the community invested the resources to make that better. i'm not saying it's the right solution for a standard, but it would be way better than jsx, since tagged templates are already a standard.
and then you immediately go on to say this:
> tagged templates could reach at least the same level of DX as JSX if the community invested the resources to make that better.
So, tagged templates are also non-starters without IDEs helping autocomplete, linting/format, syntax coloring.
> i'm not saying it's the right solution for a standard, but it would be way better than jsx, since tagged templates are already a standard.
They are strings. There's no magic in tagged templates that somehow make them immediately better for some custom non-standard syntax compared to JSX.
You can't just plop a string containing lit's custom non-standard syntax into an IDE (or a browser) and expect it to just work because "it's tagged templates are standard".
For the purpose of templating in the browser there's literally no difference between standardizing a custom syntax based with JSX or tagged templates.
they're marginally better since they have a platform-defined way to deliniate static from dynamic parts. ivi _can_ work without a runtime or build-time JS parser, while JSX cannot (because jsx has to be parsed out of full blobs of js)
on the dx/ide side, sure there's not a huge amount of difference if both had the same effort invested.
My feeling is that tagged templates would actually be a worse fit in this scenario because now you would have to distinguish between "regular" tagged templates and "templating" tag templates.
Personally, I don't think that it will have any significant impact, everyone will continue using React,Vue,Svelte and it is highly unlikely that they are going to adapt this new API.