The step going from "hello world" to "real world" (that is, here, an app with webpack + vue + vue-loader + vue-router + vuex) is where a framework shines, or not.
It is not only a matter of how fast you can setup a real world project, but also how fast you end up feeling confortable with that setup and producing app code, not setup code.
To me VueJS 2 succeeds at both very well, and I am not a front-end dev (is it an argument? :-).
P.S. Even if Vuejs is progressive, I've started my app right away with components and .vue files.
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The step going from "hello world" to "real world" (that is, here, an app with webpack + vue + vue-loader + vue-router + vuex) is where a framework shines, or not.
It is not only a matter of how fast you can setup a real world project, but also how fast you end up feeling confortable with that setup and producing app code, not setup code.
To me VueJS 2 succeeds at both very well, and I am not a front-end dev (is it an argument? :-).
P.S. Even if Vuejs is progressive, I've started my app right away with components and .vue files.