So an inferior version control system that works at odds with the main one that you're using to manage your repo (probably Git) and that works against anyone who's interested in what the version control system is supposed to be for?
Just commit the code to your repo. Orthogonal/overlay SCMs like NPM were a mistake—promulgated by people with serious misapprehensions not unlike those that are the target of the article linked here, i.e. those who are (still) insistent on using JS CDNs for <reasons>—ones they can't explain, but that they're sure makes it a good idea. I mean, doing it this way has got to be good for something, otherwise there wouldn't be so many people doing it this way, right?
So an inferior version control system that works at odds with the main one that you're using to manage your repo (probably Git) and that works against anyone who's interested in what the version control system is supposed to be for?
Just commit the code to your repo. Orthogonal/overlay SCMs like NPM were a mistake—promulgated by people with serious misapprehensions not unlike those that are the target of the article linked here, i.e. those who are (still) insistent on using JS CDNs for <reasons>—ones they can't explain, but that they're sure makes it a good idea. I mean, doing it this way has got to be good for something, otherwise there wouldn't be so many people doing it this way, right?