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Top comments (26)
Svelte for all front end work. Svelte is a JavaScript transpiler, so it really isnβt a library. But it is the best for fast, small frontend code.
I like working with Go language backends, but I mostly end up using PHP still. Iβve done some Node.js with Express for a personal server on my computer that I use for automation. That has been a very fun project!
JavaScript + React = π (GOAT)
The greatest of all time βοΈ
Ayee no TypeScript??? π
AyeeYay no TypeScript!! :)thin.dev + TypeScript + React
What's difference between Thin and Supabase?
The biggest difference is optimistic updates. This saves a lot of boilerplate you'd typically use redux for.
My personal favorite is React Js and Node Js for frontend and backend development respectively. π
I just love the lifecycle of React #οΈβ£ and not gonna lie it's really have many edge over Angular JS π₯.
And Node Js with Express Js is like having the most powerful tool in your hand π . A big community π§βπ€βπ§, huge number of module support for various utilities πand regular updates β».
Open to know more views, and would love to discuss more about it.
gatsby.js + headless CMS and gatsby cloud for clients that need fast and modern websites.
For building web applications that are based on regular form submission I would probably pick RedwoodJS today.
TypeScript + NextJS, currently use it for almost every project.
C#, Python and PHP are my mains, and excluding C# from this discussion (b/c it's for Unity,) lightweight frameworks are my go-to. For example, here are the frameworks that I have used recently:
Sure, you need some knowledge as you will have to integrate another libraries as needed, but at least I know what I'm doing.
I'm not saying that catch-all frameworks such as Laravel are bad, I still use them for larger scale projects. The thing is, I need to host these on my rented server. They track the disk quota by both the file size and the file count, and they also confine us to a specific version of interpreters. So I'd like to keep things small.
I use other things, but nothing unseats Ruby on Rails as my favorite.
Iβm Ben and I am a Rails developer
Ben Halpern γ» Apr 17 '18 γ» 3 min read
PHP + TailwindCSS + AlpineJS + Laravel + Linux = TALL stack
Shouldn't it be PTALL stack , or is the P(hp) implied in the L(for larvel , since I think larvel is a php framework , I'm not sure)?
Yes, or the P could be silent like pterodactyl
TypeScript & Angular & Modular Federation & AG Grid & Bootstrap & SASS & npm & yarn & node & ES6 & HTML