Many, many places. Maybe not just React, but frameworks in general. I've lost count of the number of REALLY simple websites (Portfolio websites with next to zero interactivity, holding pages for upcoming projects, single page form websites, etc. - the list is long) that, for some bizarre reason, have been built using a framework. It literally makes no sense
(I personally loathe React, that's probably why I singled it out initially. I work with it on daily basis though, unfortunately 😞)
Vanilla JS would perform better than React for ALL websites. Frameworks become handy when the complexity of the site means that development using raw JS would start becoming a nightmare... in these cases, a framework would likely be easier to manage. It's a trade-off
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Many, many places. Maybe not just React, but frameworks in general. I've lost count of the number of REALLY simple websites (Portfolio websites with next to zero interactivity, holding pages for upcoming projects, single page form websites, etc. - the list is long) that, for some bizarre reason, have been built using a framework. It literally makes no sense
(I personally loathe React, that's probably why I singled it out initially. I work with it on daily basis though, unfortunately 😞)
Oh, yeah! Vanilla Javascript/HTML/CSS would perform better than React for simple noninteractive webpages. It also has better SEO.
Vanilla JS would perform better than React for ALL websites. Frameworks become handy when the complexity of the site means that development using raw JS would start becoming a nightmare... in these cases, a framework would likely be easier to manage. It's a trade-off