I’m remortgaging next year and with interest rates as they are and what they’re predicted to be, I’ll be paying off only interest. I’ll be back to paying rent essentially. It’s a scary thought.
I don’t know how people (not 4%) are surviving.
How would the housing market bubble bursting affect people in this same situation?
CSS is a big part of the web and lots of people use it every day. I find this post interesting because it inspects a world-class app used by millions of people, and it showcases some of CSS’s latest capabilities, plus it has nice graphics illustrating the findings!
No one is expecting you to learn the new framework. Interest is the main driver for learning anything new, just like anyone.
Most front end devs, in my experience, want to optimize the developer experience, increase performance, and or reduce boilerplate, so the new fancy framework might show promise in doing said things, and that’s what makes you want that framework to do well.
If a job requires a new framework, it’s likely that the CTO or senior devs of that company believe the above.
Svelte is just perfect for small to medium projects. I’ve never used Svelte in a professional team environment though. And that’s where React is best- enterprise environment with a team.
For hobby; svelte 100%
Less boilerplate, super easy set up and you write less code in general.
I don’t know how people (not 4%) are surviving.
How would the housing market bubble bursting affect people in this same situation?