Tuesday, 20 February, 2018 UTC


Summary

  • The six choices were:Obviously this list is not complete, but I decided from the start to try and keep the survey’s length down even at the cost of being less exhaustive.I did also provide an “other” option asking people to provide any additional frameworks I might’ve missed (more on that…
  • It will be interesting to see if these results change as more people take the survey, but for now at least it seems clear that apart from newcomer Vue, front-end frameworks don’t really suffer from lack of awareness.InterestThe second thing I wanted to figure out was what image people had…
  • Maybe a sign that the trend is going towards lighter-weight, single-purpose libraries?SatisfactionFinally, I wanted to know how happy people were with the frameworks they had used.This would seem to confirm that React and Vue are not all hype: they genuinely provide good developer experiences.You’ll notice I didn’t ask how many…
  • Part of it is because I wanted to cut down the survey’s length, but it’s also because I’m not sure how useful raw usage stats would be.For example, I’m willing to bet Angular’s market share is still huge, but would that be reason enough to pick it for your next…
  • Protip: if you want to anticipate 2030’s hottest baby name trends, look at JavaScript frameworks!ConclusionsMy main goal with this survey was to make it easier for developers to decide which frameworks to learn and use.Based on the current data, I think it’s safe to say that you can’t really go…
I’ve been very impressed with the success of my State Of JavaScript survey so far. After barely three days, the survey already has over 3000 responses. So I thought it’d be interesting to see what…
@K0YCHEV: “The State Of #JavaScript: Front-End Frameworks” by @SachaGreif #angularjs #reactjs #VueJS…
The State Of JavaScript: Front-End FrameworksA few preliminary resultsI’ve been very impressed with the success of my State Of JavaScript survey so far. After barely three days, the survey already has over 3000 responses. So I thought it’d be interesting to see what preliminary insights we can extract from that data.I say “preliminary” because I‘m hoping a lot more developers end up filling out the survey. Not so much to get a bigger-sized sample, but to get a more representative one. After all, these kind of survey tend to reach a population of early adopters first, and that can easily skew the results.Incidentally, this is also why I didn’t try to advertise the survey to Discover Meteor readers. If I had, Meteor might very well ended up as number one in all categories!So with this in mind, let’s see what the data tells us!The ContendersIn this first look, we’ll focus on front-end frameworks. The six choices were:Obviously this list is not complete, but I decided from the start to try and keep the survey’s length down even at the cost of being less exhaustive.I did also provide an “other” option asking people to provide any additional frameworks I might’ve missed (more on that later).For each framework, people could pick one of the following answers:I’ve never heard of itI’ve heard of it, and would like to learn itI’ve heard of it, and am not interestedI’ve used it before, and would use it againI’ve used it before, and would not use it…
The State Of JavaScript: Front-End Frameworks – Sacha Greif – Medium