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by externedguy
732 days ago
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> Very very few companies build and maintain SDKs for Elixir. This is true with any tech until it gets traction. React/Next is backed by a big company, but Vue/Nuxt still managed to grab its piece of the pie. In order to get traction Erlang / Elixir needs enthusiasts who are ok with risking and introducing it to their company or product, at least partially. No offense, but instead of condemning the Elixir ecosystem, why not embrace it in your company or product, as many have done (including me)?
I think most devs should be OK with taking a tolerable risk if they see opportunity to increase productivity by N times |
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Elixir has been around for 12 years now and still hasn't gained any meaningful traction.
The risk of using Elixir vastly out ways the benefits today if you are trying to build a product.
There is a reason why almost every product today is built using JS and Python because it easy to find developers, it's easy to find everything you need, almost every service supports it and there are tons of resources for it.
We switched for Elixir to JS and we only have to maintain the app itself. We have hundreds of OSS helping maintain the libraries we use most of them working for companies that the libraries are for. That's the massive advantage of using popular languages that everyone uses.
Elixir is a fun language but that's about it.