@seldo economics indeed but the changing storyline is also well documented (yes that's grifting!)
And also ppl need to know how HTML/etc work in order to use React not the other way around.
@seldo I'm not blaming devs and agree ppl are doing the best they can w the information they've got. They are being mislead, again that's clearly documented, and it's way past time we stop excusing unprofessional outputs.
It's ok to expect better, and do better by web consumers and creators alike.
@brianleroux @seldo I understand your perspective and agree Alex's article can be read as aggressive (though I didn't take it as calling developers stupid).
However, I think you recognize and then undersell the impact of momentum/network effects. We trained/hired lots of new devs in the last decade and many only ever learned React. I've met folks who don't know how to build web sites without it or who used it on large projects where it was wholly unnecessary because they thought they had to.
@brianleroux @blittle @seldo and it depends on what your web app is, how far it strays from "show content" into "do stuff in the browser", etc.
"Don't use a backhoe when all you need is a shovel" is good advice, but so is "Don't use a shovel when you need a backhoe".
@seldo @brianleroux I think that's fair and have seen it in play in orgs I work with. "This is what we know and can move fastest with" is always the baseline reasoning.
That doesn't mean that its the right choice in the long run. The oil comparison is apt, we all know it's bad, we all know there are better alternatives and yet many of us continue to abuse our environment for what people keep selling us is easy and fast.
Doesn't make it right, we just need to keep arguing to open people's eyes!