I think frameworks are going to evolve into a tool for communication among programmers. The best example I can think of is the AWS SDK. All the operations are named similarly, regardless of which underlying language your SDK is using, so you can communicate with any other AWS developer in the world and discuss concepts with no breakdown in understanding. The most popular frameworks will have an opportunity to establish their dominance by establishing the common language we could potentially use to describe their problem domain permanently.
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I think frameworks are going to evolve into a tool for communication among programmers. The best example I can think of is the AWS SDK. All the operations are named similarly, regardless of which underlying language your SDK is using, so you can communicate with any other AWS developer in the world and discuss concepts with no breakdown in understanding. The most popular frameworks will have an opportunity to establish their dominance by establishing the common language we could potentially use to describe their problem domain permanently.