What is your perception on Meteor in 2019?
(Source/Credits: https://dev.to/jankapunkt/what-is-your-perception-on-meteor-in-2019-2lpo)
This somewhat of a short survey. Please comment first before you start researching the web, no matter...
This somewhat of a short survey. Please comment first before you start researching the web, no matter if you love it, dropped it, came back to it or never heard of it.
I will not only wrap it up in a follow-up article but also will give you an overview about it's journey (or better the last four years of it) and current state (the tech, the framework, the community, the company behind it).
The "survey" will last one month and ends on 2019/09/25.
Comments section
marcusyoda
•May 1, 2024
Sad that the survey ended, just adding an opinion from 2020. kkk
Meteor is more alive than ever!
Educationally speaking, it is a perfect ecosystem for training junior developers. Knowing the basics of web development, which includes javascript, you will be able to program. Even if you don't know what it's like under the hood, you will do countless projects.
Not for junior developers and small projects only, I find it interesting and functional for large projects, with solid and fluent javascript teams.
Specifically talking about Blaze, which is just part of Meteor. I believe it is alive and functional. What is missing is third party packages to cause frisson in the community.
In other projects I write in react too, and with the concepts of data flow and componentization that React led me to learn, I can design and analyze great applications with Blaze.
paulen_8
•May 1, 2024
Super excited to try it still actually.
javaverse
•May 1, 2024
a dead framework