Add detailed landing page development plan in docs/frontend_landing_plan.md: - Complete landing page structure (Hero, Problem/Solution, Features, Demo, CTA) - Design guidelines from downloaded skills (typography, color, motion, composition) - Security considerations (XSS prevention, input sanitization, CSP) - Performance targets (LCP <2.5s, bundle <150KB, Lighthouse >90) - Responsiveness and accessibility requirements (WCAG 2.1 AA) - Success KPIs and monitoring setup - 3-week development timeline with daily tasks - Definition of Done checklist Download 10+ frontend/UI/UX skills via universal-skills-manager: - frontend-ui-ux: UI/UX design without mockups - frontend-design-guidelines: Production-grade interface guidelines - frontend-developer: React best practices (40+ rules) - frontend-engineer: Next.js 14 App Router patterns - ui-ux-master: Comprehensive design systems and accessibility - ui-ux-systems-designer: Information architecture and interaction - ui-ux-design-user-experience: Platform-specific guidelines - Plus additional reference materials and validation scripts Configure universal-skills MCP with SkillsMP API key for curated skill access. Safety first: All skills validated before installation, no project code modified. Refs: Universal Skills Manager (github:jacob-bd/universal-skills-manager) Next: Begin Sprint 3 landing page development
2.1 KiB
2.1 KiB
title, impact, impactDescription, tags
| title | impact | impactDescription | tags |
|---|---|---|---|
| Use Loop for Min/Max Instead of Sort | LOW | O(n) instead of O(n log n) | javascript, arrays, performance, sorting, algorithms |
Use Loop for Min/Max Instead of Sort
Finding the smallest or largest element only requires a single pass through the array. Sorting is wasteful and slower.
Incorrect (O(n log n) - sort to find latest):
interface Project {
id: string
name: string
updatedAt: number
}
function getLatestProject(projects: Project[]) {
const sorted = [...projects].sort((a, b) => b.updatedAt - a.updatedAt)
return sorted[0]
}
Sorts the entire array just to find the maximum value.
Incorrect (O(n log n) - sort for oldest and newest):
function getOldestAndNewest(projects: Project[]) {
const sorted = [...projects].sort((a, b) => a.updatedAt - b.updatedAt)
return { oldest: sorted[0], newest: sorted[sorted.length - 1] }
}
Still sorts unnecessarily when only min/max are needed.
Correct (O(n) - single loop):
function getLatestProject(projects: Project[]) {
if (projects.length === 0) return null
let latest = projects[0]
for (let i = 1; i < projects.length; i++) {
if (projects[i].updatedAt > latest.updatedAt) {
latest = projects[i]
}
}
return latest
}
function getOldestAndNewest(projects: Project[]) {
if (projects.length === 0) return { oldest: null, newest: null }
let oldest = projects[0]
let newest = projects[0]
for (let i = 1; i < projects.length; i++) {
if (projects[i].updatedAt < oldest.updatedAt) oldest = projects[i]
if (projects[i].updatedAt > newest.updatedAt) newest = projects[i]
}
return { oldest, newest }
}
Single pass through the array, no copying, no sorting.
Alternative (Math.min/Math.max for small arrays):
const numbers = [5, 2, 8, 1, 9]
const min = Math.min(...numbers)
const max = Math.max(...numbers)
This works for small arrays but can be slower for very large arrays due to spread operator limitations. Use the loop approach for reliability.