As a non Elm lover, Why is that? I think you could freeze every JS frontend framework in time right now and use them for the next decade. JS is very backwards compatible.
It's the ones that do some kind of server connection that introduce vulnerabilities and need active development.
It's stuck in time, has no support, only core devs can expose newer DOM apis (and when I say newer I mean released in the last 6/7 years). Very hard to hire for, not LLM friendly.
I guess if every piece of tech you learn is about finding a job or using LLMs that might matter.
But again, I don't think no support matters. How many DOM apis do you know of in the last 10 years that are essential? There are sites on JQuery 2 running fine.
As a non Elm lover, Why is that? I think you could freeze every JS frontend framework in time right now and use them for the next decade. JS is very backwards compatible.
It's the ones that do some kind of server connection that introduce vulnerabilities and need active development.
It's stuck in time, has no support, only core devs can expose newer DOM apis (and when I say newer I mean released in the last 6/7 years). Very hard to hire for, not LLM friendly.
I guess if every piece of tech you learn is about finding a job or using LLMs that might matter.
But again, I don't think no support matters. How many DOM apis do you know of in the last 10 years that are essential? There are sites on JQuery 2 running fine.