Enter your suggestions in details:
Hey Node team!
Problem
I was recently looking at the Node.js website to find what the latest Node.js 24 LTS version was and noticed on the Downloads page that there was community / unofficial suggestion for asdf as a way to install Node.js. The only available options under Community are Brew, Devbox, Chocolatey, n, and Volta:
As a full-time software engineer at beehiiv — where we use a lot of different programming languages and runtimes, including Node.js — asdf tends to be our recommendation when we onboard developers to their new work machines. This is because unlike nvm, asdf supports the ability to version manage all of those different languages and runtimes across different repos without having to reach for a language or runtime-specific version manager. This means instead of installing nvm, rbenv, goenv, etc., our developers can install asdf and version manage their installs of Node, Ruby, Go, etc.
I've been using the Node.js asdf plugin for a couple of years now and it's been extremely easy to use. It's also one of the plugins in the asdf ecosystem that is maintained by the official asdf team, so it gets critical and regular updates (versus some of the others, which are maintained by third parties).
Suggestion
The Node.js website should include the asdf install method under the Community download options. This would help multi-language/runtime developers like myself and my team find an easier way to get the one time command needed to download the relevant version of Node.js for a project and install it.
If approved, I'm happy to take this one on myself and contribute to the repo! I'm very familiar with the asdf install process, as well as Next.js, and am one of the people who consistently onboards new developers at beehiiv, where asdf is used commonly and as our go-to version manager!
Enter your suggestions in details:
Hey Node team!
Problem
I was recently looking at the Node.js website to find what the latest Node.js 24 LTS version was and noticed on the Downloads page that there was community / unofficial suggestion for asdf as a way to install Node.js. The only available options under
Communityare Brew, Devbox, Chocolatey, n, and Volta:As a full-time software engineer at beehiiv — where we use a lot of different programming languages and runtimes, including Node.js —
asdftends to be our recommendation when we onboard developers to their new work machines. This is because unlikenvm,asdfsupports the ability to version manage all of those different languages and runtimes across different repos without having to reach for a language or runtime-specific version manager. This means instead of installingnvm,rbenv,goenv, etc., our developers can installasdfand version manage their installs of Node, Ruby, Go, etc.I've been using the Node.js asdf plugin for a couple of years now and it's been extremely easy to use. It's also one of the plugins in the
asdfecosystem that is maintained by the officialasdfteam, so it gets critical and regular updates (versus some of the others, which are maintained by third parties).Suggestion
The Node.js website should include the
asdfinstall method under theCommunitydownload options. This would help multi-language/runtime developers like myself and my team find an easier way to get the one time command needed to download the relevant version of Node.js for a project and install it.If approved, I'm happy to take this one on myself and contribute to the repo! I'm very familiar with the
asdfinstall process, as well as Next.js, and am one of the people who consistently onboards new developers at beehiiv, whereasdfis used commonly and as our go-to version manager!