My team gave up on hip frameworks when angularJS became angular 2.0, and went back to jinja and a little JavaScript here and there.
It increased our productivity by quite a bit, and everyone got less stressed from not having to constantly stay up to date on X.
I think most of us has done a lot of X’es for fun. I did some graphql personally, but nothing that ever ended up in production.
The funny thing is, we seem to have not really missed out on anything. The article is completely on point, frameworks come and go (rapidly these days), and when we needed to build a few VUE.JS widgets, we frankly could. It took a little time to learn VUE and especially the Axios package which was also needed. Probably more time than it would have if we had kept up-to-date on JS frameworks, but we had a lot of time to spare from not having kept up-to-date on popular JS frameworks since AngularJS.
It increased our productivity by quite a bit, and everyone got less stressed from not having to constantly stay up to date on X.
I think most of us has done a lot of X’es for fun. I did some graphql personally, but nothing that ever ended up in production.
The funny thing is, we seem to have not really missed out on anything. The article is completely on point, frameworks come and go (rapidly these days), and when we needed to build a few VUE.JS widgets, we frankly could. It took a little time to learn VUE and especially the Axios package which was also needed. Probably more time than it would have if we had kept up-to-date on JS frameworks, but we had a lot of time to spare from not having kept up-to-date on popular JS frameworks since AngularJS.