🔥 It has been wonderful to see the growth of Angular in the "State of JavaScript" +12% retention +5% usage +5% positivity This means a lot coming from a React-heavy audience 🙏 In our Angular specific survey we saw a major satisfaction improvement thanks to signals and more! #angular #typescript #programming #webdev #webdevelopment #webperformance #javascript
What is this survey exactly about? Is it popularity or usage?
So React has dropped to the third place. It's interesting to note that Stencil and Lit (web components libraries) are showing a down trend.
As soon as Angular provides an easier way to pass a component to another component and configure it for building reusable UI components with ease...at that point I might officially become primarily an Angular dev. :) Everything else the team has been adding has been AMAZING though!
i am not if some people use popularity as a basis of their technical decisions. maybe its just an indicator but we have to find a balance between not just popular but also what is right for the use case. I saw people throw a lot of shinny stuff on the project stack but ended not being able to finish the project or just added more friction to the development.
Kudos to the team! The updated https://angular.dev/ website makes learning Angular both easy and comprehensive, while the new Signal concept is truly mind-blowing.
The last versions of angular make me feel excited to work with it again
Kudos to the team! Each Angular update brings significant enhancements, as evident in the Medium posts and the revamped website and documentation, solidifying Angular's position as a market leader.
Angular v19 looks promising, especially incremental hydration and linked signals.
Congrats angular team 👍 i hope we can see @angular/ai soon as well😁
Programmer, Founder @ Moby IT | TypeScript, Golang, Docker
23hI think that the screenshot shared in this post is quite misleading. I tried to reach this chart state and it was not so obvious. The chart is filtered by awareness, which I expect Angular to rate really high, but that was not enough to get this result. You also have to filter by Rank, so that Angular shows on top of Vue and React, probably due to alphabetical sorting. Considering the above, I can't really think of any good reason to present this image aside from misleading fast scrolling viewers of LinkedIn into believing that Angular is the #1 on a metric of some sort, which is simply not true, at least from this survey. Angular has been the tool that I use since 2015 in my job. I've been able to evolve as an programmer and I'm extremely thankful for that. But the framing in which the framework is presented in this image, I consider misleading.