It depends on the context. Some of the points may be valid, but you're choosing raw performance over developer experience.
If performance is the top priority, there are of course better options. But if you're balancing speed, ecosystem and developer experience, this is still a strong choice in 2025.
I have a wide range of experience with full stack web development, graphic design, UI/UX, 3d and architecture. I enjoy solving a variety of problems in simple and creative ways.
What part of the developer experience makes React a strong choice?
Maybe it's the part it's not a framework, but a "library"?
Wait, is it the documentation (:puke)?
Hmm, maybe it's the learning curve? But really?
I guess it's the tooling (vite/vitest)... Oh snap
I got it... It's the rules of react/rules of react state/rules of of react styling/rules of ??, sorry had to double check if they had invented a new rule while I was typing this
PR comment: Don't forget about useCallback and useMemo, useGrandma and please don't ever useGrandpa? What do these actually actually do? And let's not talk about useImperativeHandle.... (background screams)
I am telling you it must be because they are following the web standards. html/templates? Nope jsx. Routing/location? nah, react routing! css/styling? No way, styled components. SSR, how about "use server"..
Perhaps it's the fragmented ecosystem because its always fun to compare class components, server/client components, hooks, observables and 10 other ways you can learn to manage state at your next job.
Must be the typescript support! React must be written in typescript? Right? Right? OK, it doesn't matter. Don't worry, there are dozen of functions like forwardRef that don't support generics.
Wait, what is developer experience? Ahhh, getting paid to know all possible edge cases and write more code than necessary to get the job done... That's why. Now it makes sense!
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It depends on the context. Some of the points may be valid, but you're choosing raw performance over developer experience.
If performance is the top priority, there are of course better options. But if you're balancing speed, ecosystem and developer experience, this is still a strong choice in 2025.
What part of the developer experience makes React a strong choice?
forwardRefthat don't support generics.Wait, what is developer experience? Ahhh, getting paid to know all possible edge cases and write more code than necessary to get the job done... That's why. Now it makes sense!