@pablo I’d say @deno_land has a lot going for it. It’s the most modern and browser-compatible #javascriot runtime I know. A lot of the tests can run on #deno rather than in the browser. How Deno manages dependencies is above and beyond what node does with its node_modules nightmare. Node compatibility is there but don’t use it unless you have to. Plus they look financially stable for the foreseeable future, they are supplying several established companies.
@defuneste I work at a private company and our blog/Website is for internal use only. #quarto is fantastic as you can use bash, #rstats, #python and #javascriot in one and the same document, so everyone from r&d to backend to frontend can contribute. Hence, whipping up a proof of concept is fairly straight forward.
I did a small rewrite of my #SanMateoCounty (California) election map script into #Javascriot with #d3 and threw it up on the web: https://www.growsouthcity.com/general/2022/11/22/election-results.html
Election Results

The results as of November 23rd, 2022 are plotted below. There were several issues with the precinct ids between the county’s downloadable map, the results CSV, and the consolidation file for this election; I have attempted to manually fix as many of those as possible, but please let me know if you find any issues with the data.

Grow South City