• azezeB@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    Thank you for the explanation, so do you think angular is better? I want to start doing front-end and I don’t know what to pick

    • naught@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      React is awesome. Sure it has problems but what doesn’t? It’s easy to learn and JSX is great. I would try Next.js, Remix.js or just use Vite. Personally I’m trying out CT3A but that’s a bit on the edge (and uses Next). There are a lot of jobs with react out there and it’s a joy to work with imo.

      Vue is supposed to be easy but I had a hard time with the initial learning curve. The community seems much smaller too. I have heard good things about Nuxt though.

      Angular is robust but the hardest of the bunch to learn based on popular sentiment i’ve heard.

      • jana@leminal.space
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        1 year ago

        JSX can exist without React; it’s essentially just an alternative syntax for function calls.

        (That is, annoyingly, handicapped in the Typescript checker)

        • CannotSleep420@lemmygrad.ml
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          1 year ago

          Solid uses JSX and is both much more performant than React while removing several of it’s footguns. You also have WASM frameworks like Leptos that use similar syntax (RSX) while using languages that aren’t JS.

        • naught@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Very true! Shouldnt be a point for react i guess. I believe they originated the syntax perhaps? Regardless, I love it (:

    • lemmy_st3v3@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Angular is different from React, totally different. For one it’s a framework. React is a library. People tend to say Angular is harder to learn then React but I totally disagree with that. I personally found Angular really easy to learn, especially if you look at their documentation at https://angular.io/docs you just need to work through it, step by step. This is not the same with React, again my personal experience. In Angular you have common concepts like observables, subscriptions, dependency injection, separation of concern’s, and not to forget functional programming with RxJS. And the documentation that you can find in MDN about html, css, javascript is then also complimentary to it. Overal I found Angular to be a cleaner environment to develop in. And testing is so much more concise.

      Anyhow, don’t focus on one library/framework. I would even say learn the basics like what you can find on MDN, javascript, html, css, typescript. The rest is always framework/library specific. Let the job decide what you are going to learn first. You know programming, that’s great you will learn the stuff they use on the job and in your free hours ;) In my experience you will have to change anyways. For example I have worked at companies, government and private. Where one uses JSP!!!(in 2022, not it was not a government organization) Then Angular, then React.

      • azezeB@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        Thank you a lot for taking the time to answer. I think I’ll try some of them, so I can make a more solid decision based on what suits me better.

    • WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Look at your local job market, where you want to work, or what you want to build to determine what to learn.

      No point learning any tech unless it aligns with the problem(s) you’re trying to solve.

    • pm_me_your_quackers@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Doesn’t matter what an internet rando thinks, there are more React jobs at the moment. I’ve only seen Angular used by large enterprises for internal BI apps, which are harder jobs to get.

      • azezeB@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        Yeah I’m not basing a life choice on a rando, but it can help to hear his motivations. Once I have that I can draw my conclusions.

        Thanks for your input too.

        • pm_me_your_quackers@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Honestly, easiest to learn is probably React. That + market share would make me learn that first. Newer frameworks tend to base what they do with ergonomics from React. Even my favorite (at the moment) frontend library, SolidJS, has all their tutorials with references to how you do things in React, and how similar signals work with Solid. Learning Vue, Svelte, all have the same issue; they compare themselves to React to show you how they do things with their library. And it makes sense, for better-or-worse.