Personally I'd always recommend angular 2+ for enterprise level apps, but a big factor I always mention to a customer when consulting is to have a look at the market of developers. You don't want to pick a technology or framework that isn't as common or popular amongst the pool of developers you have in the area; then the onboarding time could be drastically different than the initial argument for angular.
In my area the 'biggest fish' has decided that react would be the common framework for all new projects, so service providers are scrambling for react talent. I would love to be a fly on the wall to hear how that decision was made... It's like the chicken or the egg... Did they choose it because it was popular or of out popular because they chose it?
I am not so sure it was the right choice but that the outside looking in. Time may tell.
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Personally I'd always recommend angular 2+ for enterprise level apps, but a big factor I always mention to a customer when consulting is to have a look at the market of developers. You don't want to pick a technology or framework that isn't as common or popular amongst the pool of developers you have in the area; then the onboarding time could be drastically different than the initial argument for angular.
In my area the 'biggest fish' has decided that react would be the common framework for all new projects, so service providers are scrambling for react talent. I would love to be a fly on the wall to hear how that decision was made... It's like the chicken or the egg... Did they choose it because it was popular or of out popular because they chose it?
I am not so sure it was the right choice but that the outside looking in. Time may tell.