I've always been a bit annoyed that there are two major realms of javascript projects -- Node and "the browser" -- and while most browser JS can be easily run inside Node with a couple libraries for DOM stuff if needed, porting Node stuff to the browser is usually an afterthought.
This all seems like a lot of wasted energy on the part of developer communities, which could be alleviated by all JS developers just developing for the "least common denominator" (the browser) and using various shims to use features only available in Node or other JS environments besides the plain old browser.
This would not only cut out a lot ecosystem cruft and make development-in-the-browser more realistic, it also makes it commonplace to give the browser superpowers…Look for example at browserver, which sets up an http server inside the browser, but because the browser cannot actually accept http requests, uses websockets to talk to a proxy Node server that can.
So I want to ask, what are the real technical constraints of a web browser's javascript environment versus Node?
I thought Node was just "a javascript environment, plus http server and local filesystem, minus the DOM and the chrome". Are there technical reasons why developers could not potentially move to the approach I described above, developing for the browser JS environment (does this have an official name?) and using shims for Node?
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