These are two separate worlds. I think it's a choice of habit.
I'm programming in PHP from 2003.
Then Rails. Then Node.JS.
All of them are differ. They can be used for the same purposes, but any of them has its own advantages and disadvantages.
No one will deny you to use any stack of technologies in your work.
And if you're not doing large scalable projects performance difference between those languages is not so noticeable.
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These are two separate worlds. I think it's a choice of habit.
I'm programming in PHP from 2003.
Then Rails. Then Node.JS.
All of them are differ. They can be used for the same purposes, but any of them has its own advantages and disadvantages.
No one will deny you to use any stack of technologies in your work.
And if you're not doing large scalable projects performance difference between those languages is not so noticeable.