The web was not designed using React, Vue, Angular or any other modern JavaScript framework in the back of your mind. It was created for documents, linked together, continually enhanced and available by default. Yet, the web of today is heavily influenced by build tools, frameworks and abstraction layers that are built on top of each other.

How did we arrive here? What does this mean for the way we create the web of in the present?

This isn’t so much an issue and more of an observation from someone who creates for the web of today but still respects the source of their work.

The Original Web: Simple, Declarative, and Forgiving

At its heart, the web was built upon three technologies:

HTML documents loaded very quickly and worked on nearly every device, and was degraded easily. If JavaScript was not working, the webpage was still functional. Accessibility was not a checklist, it was built into.

You can view the source to understand the page and alter it without any tools. The entry barrier was minimal while the feedback loop was instantaneous.

It wasn’t perfect, but it was a strong and durable product.

Frameworks Enter the Scene

As web-based applications became more complicated and more complex, the limitations of plain JavaScript became apparent. The management of states, DOM updates, and interactions with users at a large huge scale was hard and often messy.

Frameworks have been developed to solve the real issues:

They helped make larger teams more productive and made complex interfaces more manageable. In the end it felt like the price was worth it.

Frameworks didn’t only enhance the web, they started to replace the web’s mental model at its foundation.

When the Tooling Became the Product

The modern web development process typically includes:

In most instances, you’re not sending an actual document, but rather the JavaScript runtime which generates documents after.

It has implications:

The irony? We have worked in order to “improve” the internet that we sometimes fight the web itself.

The Cost of Abstraction

Frameworks abstract complexity but they also conceal the fundamentals.

New developers might discover:

When abstractions leak — and they do, debugging becomes more difficult. It’s no longer about solving web problems, but instead framework-related problems.

Frameworks don’t necessarily mean they aren’t bad. They are powerful tools and power tools require understanding, not blind trust.

The Shift Back Toward the Platform

It is interesting to note that the industry is undergoing a correction.

There is a renewed emphasis on:

Modern meta-frameworks like modern meta-frameworks, islands architecture and server components accept an undisputed fact: The browser itself is extremely efficient at what it does.

Frameworks are getting thinner. The platform is getting stronger.

It’s a positive change.

My Approach as a Web Developer

I have frameworks, but I don’t believe in them.

I begin by asking:

Frameworks are a way to achieve a goal and not a destination. The purpose is:

Sometimes, the most effective solution is an application framework. Sometimes, it’s the web that is used correctly.

So… Where Are We Now?

The web wasn’t designed for frameworks, but they’re not going away. That’s fine.

The future is in the hands developers who:

Web development success isn’t just about the state of your technology. It’s about how your work can be used by real people using real devices on the ground.

In some cases the most innovative option is to keep track of the point at which the web began.