jQuery got the Nickelback treatment. Except I really did enjoy using jQuery, and only moved on because "the industry" was and I didn't want to be left behind.
Looking back now, we all were lead down a path of needless complexity. Even thought I'd never use jQuery or jQueryUI professionally now, I still have a voice in the back of my mind that will pop up every now and then to say "well, if it's not gonna be complex or long-lived..." when something calls for a quick UI.
I feel this way about Bootstrap and maybe now am old enough that I don't care if it upsets other developers.
Something like bootstrap seems so ludicrously non-complex that I don't think anyone competent should be getting upset with you for its use.
I mean, OK fine, go ahead and fanboy/girl Vue/React/(Needless complexity api) whatever. But really? They get upset looking through code for an HTML5/bootstrap page? Something's not right there. That's when you start suspecting they can only work in one api, and likely don't even really understand css.
I agree. To me, TWBS is just a collection of intuitive components that have been tested vigorously. They also function in a way that way people are used to because of their lineage. That they can be styled in a way that makes them not look stock...ices the cakes.
jQueryUI does something different and they are not mutually replaceable. JQuery does not do what tailwind does. And tailwind does not do what jQuery does.
JQueryUI is also in maintenance state, basically a retired project.
Looking back now, we all were lead down a path of needless complexity. Even thought I'd never use jQuery or jQueryUI professionally now, I still have a voice in the back of my mind that will pop up every now and then to say "well, if it's not gonna be complex or long-lived..." when something calls for a quick UI.
I feel this way about Bootstrap and maybe now am old enough that I don't care if it upsets other developers.