When React Starts Acting Like jQuery (and You Can Totally Tell )
SMRTR summary
React developers often write code that technically uses JSX but follows jQuery patterns underneath. Common anti-patterns include massive components that handle everything, giant useEffects replacing $(document).ready, manual DOM manipulation instead of declarative rendering, storing UI state in CSS classes, and imperative animations. These habits create maintenance nightmares and miss React's core benefits.
SMRTR provides this summary for quick context. The original article belongs to Dev.to.
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