I don't think people are going to switch back to Angular if they did use it and are now onto something different. If people loved Angular but left for specific reasons that ivy solves, then maybe, but I just don't see that happening.
I am a front-end architect. I help teams establish practices for building high-quality software. I ship high-quality code quickly. I teach people better ways of building the web.
I think that I agree with Richard. While Ivy helps a lot, the fundamentals of what makes Angular and React different are still the same. People will still continue to choose React and Angular for what they already love them for.
I do hope that the Angular team comes up with some things to make Angular easier to learn, though.
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I don't think people are going to switch back to Angular if they did use it and are now onto something different. If people loved Angular but left for specific reasons that ivy solves, then maybe, but I just don't see that happening.
I think that I agree with Richard. While Ivy helps a lot, the fundamentals of what makes Angular and React different are still the same. People will still continue to choose React and Angular for what they already love them for.
I do hope that the Angular team comes up with some things to make Angular easier to learn, though.