Skip to content

Why Radashi? #168

Open
Open
@xml

Description

@xml

Hi, Radashi team! Thank you for great open-source tooling.

I'm new to both Radash and Radashi. And, when I read the docs for Radash, it's clear to me why it exists. And, because it has great docs, and relatively recent releases, I feel comfortable adopting it.

I'm lots less clear on why a person would adopt Radashi instead, particularly given that Radashi's docs are just... Radash's docs. It's oddly... not mentioned? Except to say:

Radashi is an actively maintained fork of Radash, the fastest growing Lodash alternative with 100K+ weekly downloads.

And like: if that one is the "fastest-growing Lodash alternative"... and if that one has 4.1k stars and this one has ... 108? ... then... why wouldn't I just use that one? I think it's necessary to explain the sitch, somehow, somewhere, to accelerate the transition.

Then there's the list of Radashi benefits but... it's not really clear why those aren't also just the same benefits as Radash? I'm guessing that some of those benefits are kind of a polite sub-tweet about Radash, perhaps especially about being "actively maintained"?

I hunted around: I see the open issue and discussion on Radash about whether it's being maintained, and because none of the maintainers have responded to them, I think I understand the basic issue, and what prompted the maintainers of this project to start a new one. And, I see 13 contributors and lots of commits.

So... I think it would be helpful (especially for those disinclined to hunt as I did) to say it out-loud, here on this repo. Something like:

Why does Radashi need to exist, when there was already Radash?

We are eternally grateful to Radash for bringing Lodash into the world of Typescript. And, we would have loved to simply contribute to improving Radash. But, (since late 2023), the Radash project has gone mostly inactive, and maintainers are not even responding since September 2023 to an open discussion and issue - nor to direct email inquiries - about whether it's being actively maintained. Let alone to the many other open issues and PR's. From this, we can sadly only conclude... future progress depends on a new community and a new repo.

That could reasonably go anywhere: onto the Readme, into the new docs, or even just here as an Issue for anyone inclined to seek it. But, I think that you'll see slow adoption until you come right out and say why this exists, why it is a pro-community move, and why it's not just a 'copy-cat' or 'unconstructive bike-shedding' or something negative like that.

To be clear, I'm assuming the best. I think this project just wants to be explicit in explaining why this is, in fact, the best approach. Leaving it implicit creates FUD, and slows uptake. FWIW.

Metadata

Metadata

Assignees

No one assigned

    Labels

    No labels
    No labels

    Type

    No type

    Projects

    No projects

    Milestone

    No milestone

    Relationships

    None yet

    Development

    No branches or pull requests

    Issue actions