What is the lightest #Linux distribution you'd recommand me for coding ?

I'm a frontend used to work with #vscode #docker #gitkraken

Thank you all for your answers.

By light I mean CPU and RAM usage, also not too much useless applications.
I've heard about Antergos but I don't know how optimized it is for low setup

@andaroth you can simply install any unwanted apps to your heart's content. If you download an new release later in, it will respect the apps that you've uninstalled :)
@James
What do you mean by install unwanted to heart ?_?
@andaroth you can uninstall any application that you want :)
@James Okay, last time I've done it on Ubuntu they came back once updated the distro :/
@andaroth oh, how did you upgrade your distro then?

@James
Classical way when OS asks to.

Currently I'm on Fedora but want to switch for a web coding oriented distro

@andaroth sorry, idk very much about Ubuntu. Fedora will certainly respect it, as that's what I use.

@andaroth Depends on how light you want it.

I recommend MX Linux. Not quite the lightest weight (Bodhi is good if you want super light weight while still having a full-featured desktop), but runs real light, has great package management, and has tons of extra useful features if you wanna get real nerdy.

@abbreviatedman @andaroth agreed re: bohdi, or alternatively Ubuntu lite, or lubuntu. If you're genuinely happy messing about with Linux then arch and i3, but that's certainly not as easy as the first three on the list :)
@andaroth
Void-musl, Alpine
Though I'd really recommend using a BSD or Illumos system, lol ;)
@andaroth define 'light'. Debian with XFCE is pretty light on RAM and CPU, and only takes a couple gigs of HD space.
@andaroth
If you want something rock solid and easy to use, I'd recommend Mint (which is based on Ubuntu Long Term Support). Switched to Linux (YouTube) does front end web development on Linux Mint entirely. If you want the latest software, Flathub (Flatpak repository) is integrated into the GUI software manager. I personally prefer something more cutting edge, like Fedora, but Mint really gets out of your way and lets you concentrate on your job.