Rails could have fallen off. There was a moment where Go, Node, and maybe Elixir came up and rightfully took some market share for certain types of apps (Along with Python and a long tail of other languages you could toss in to that group).
But Rails stuck around as a very ergonomic choice with a lot of enthusiastic community behind it. Along the way I think it caught a second wind of being an ecosystem with a lot of innovation being pumped in through the bottom line success of its ecosystem.
The future is bright.
Obligatory you are currently using a Rails app statement.
I am an Engineering Physics graduate from IIT Guwahati, but merely not restricted to Physics itself. In the past few years, I involved in many Cybersecurity blogging and now on Open-source.
Rails could have fallen off. There was a moment where Go, Node, and maybe Elixir came up and rightfully took some market share for certain types of apps (Along with Python and a long tail of other languages you could toss in to that group).
But Rails stuck around as a very ergonomic choice with a lot of enthusiastic community behind it. Along the way I think it caught a second wind of being an ecosystem with a lot of innovation being pumped in through the bottom line success of its ecosystem.
The future is bright.
Obligatory you are currently using a Rails app statement.
forem / forem
For empowering community π±
I was about to comment on similar grounds π€
I expected nothing less, threw in a reference to this too!