If you know you're application is going to be microservices from the get-go and there is a clean app-model in place and the core technology will not be PHP then not using WP is pretty much a no-brainer.
If you're going to have applications and APIs as a first class citizen in your project and it must scale along multiple dimenions, WP is a bad choice. Especially if you have a team of experts and the PO/Customer knows what he wants and the architecture is properly designed. Using WP in such a scenario would be silly.
However, if time to market is your constraint and you're dealing with a customer who doesn't know what he/she wants, then WP is a very good choice. Prototyping a larger app in WP can be hackish, but time to market is next to none.
WordPress can also make sense as a pure CMS with the application streched out behind it with tons of microservices and some gluecode to handle editing and content distribution. If you have caching and search and all the tiny tidbits seperated out, WP is small enough to still service as a neat editing environment.
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If you know you're application is going to be microservices from the get-go and there is a clean app-model in place and the core technology will not be PHP then not using WP is pretty much a no-brainer.
If you're going to have applications and APIs as a first class citizen in your project and it must scale along multiple dimenions, WP is a bad choice. Especially if you have a team of experts and the PO/Customer knows what he wants and the architecture is properly designed. Using WP in such a scenario would be silly.
However, if time to market is your constraint and you're dealing with a customer who doesn't know what he/she wants, then WP is a very good choice. Prototyping a larger app in WP can be hackish, but time to market is next to none.
WordPress can also make sense as a pure CMS with the application streched out behind it with tons of microservices and some gluecode to handle editing and content distribution. If you have caching and search and all the tiny tidbits seperated out, WP is small enough to still service as a neat editing environment.