|
One thing Django has going for it is that the "batteries included" nature of it is perfect for AI code generation. You can get a working site with the usual featuers (admin panel, logins, forgot reset/password flow, etc) with minimal code thanks to the richness of the ecosystem, and because of the minimal code it's relatively easy for the AI to keep iterating on it since it's small enough to be understandable in context. |
And when you do create backends and React components, you can have a known-good ground truth in your Django admin that's independent from that frontend. This is incredibly useful in practice - if a certain e.g. malformed input triggers a catastrophic frontend crash, you have an entirely separate admin system you can use to play with the data, without needing to trace to find the exact cause of the frontend crash, or dropping into direct database access.
(My one gripe with Django, which is more with the broader Python ecosystem, is that if the community had leaned into the gevent programming model (no explicit async, all socket calls are monkey-patched to yield, you just write sync code), there would be no need for async versions/ports of every Django library function, no confusion in the library ecosystem, and instant upgrades of every Django library in existence to an async world. gevent is a thing of beauty and that's a hill I'll die on.)