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by davnicwil
3797 days ago
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Well yes, that's their general goal, but hasn't the developing React stack already won on that front? It frankly seems they at least believe it has, as it appears their plan is to take it, bundle it together under one name and re-implement some parts. The question is then, why would anyone on the React stack, which has become so popular, switch to Meteor? The stack of libraries Facebook has already put out there (not to mention third party libraries such as Redux) are designed to work together, and do so easily and very well - people are familiar with them and already using them. I suppose the only dimension on which they could coax people over from the existing React stack, Relay in particular, is by developing its feature set faster and better than Facebook can. For what it's worth I think it's a good thing, I just find it pretty intriguing if that's their play - going up against the popular tide and basically directly competing with Facebook on bundling together their own libraries. Will be great to watch their progress! |
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The "React" stack has certainly been an up and coming potential competitor for Meteor, but until Facebook or someone else actually shows signs of preparing the kind of integrated development experience that Meteor ships with out of the box, I don't think it's really similar. So that's what they're doing: tying together the best of the Javascript ecosystem, which happens to currently include a couple of projects by Facebook, into one cohesive whole that "just works".