|
|
|
|
|
by ysavir
231 days ago
|
|
That's all true, but I think the article's point still stands: React trades one set of compromises for another, and regardless of the tool used, software engineers using that tool have to do a lot of lifting to get the tool to work. It's not a question of whether react is better than backbone or vise versa, it's a question of whether we software engineers, as a group, are emphasizing the correct compromises, and what takeaways we can make from examining the compromises of today's popular tools. |
|
The reality is stateful UI is complex on its own. Then JS tooling is complex (byo typescript and std lib). Then UI is something everyone sees so the whole company has opinions about how it should look. Mush it all together and FE development is rough. React is a punching bag because its been dominant so long. Id welcome the next phase when it arrives. But building toy apps with aged technology imo wont bring to light any unturned stones. Id recommend researching the plethora of real code and discussions that have beaten this horse to death on the open internet instead.