
Angular and Next.js are two dominant technologies in web development, but they shine in distinct scenarios. Angular is ideal for complex enterprise applications, focusing on consistency and long lifecycles. Next.js, on the other hand, excels in content-heavy sites, MVPs, and projects requiring high performance and SEO. The right choice depends on your project's context.

Oxide transforms Tailwind CSS v4 into its own engine. With a hybrid architecture in TypeScript and Rust, the new engine eliminates generic layers, accelerates rebuilds, and integrates Lightning CSS for a more native configuration.

Many developers overlook the CSS pseudo-classes :where() and :is(), seeing them as "syntax sugar". This article reveals how crucial they are for solving specificity chaos, enabling you to create scalable and maintainable CSS. Understand the difference and apply them in resets, components, and design systems.

Learn the pillars of CSS Flexbox in record time. A guide focused on the essential syntax and alignments you actually use daily, without fluff and straight to the code.

Tired of slow builds and invalidating cache? Next.js 16 solves this! With Turbopack now standard, Cache Components for explicit cache control, proxy.ts for Node.js, stable React Compiler, and React 19.2, development becomes faster and more intuitive. Also discover DevTools MCP for AI-assisted debugging.

If your last memory of Angular is Zone.js causing unpredictable re-renders and Webpack builds that take forever, you’re thinking of a framework that no longer exists. Modern Angular is something else entirely.