Hi Rajdeep, I created a pull request against the react boilerplate to cleanup the angular.js integration: https://github.com/uglycoyote/buildbot-react-plugin-boilerplate/pull/1
I guess using this method should work better for you for vue.js as well. Pierre On Fri, Mar 22, 2019 at 9:10 AM Rajdeep Bharati <rajdeepbharat...@gmail.com> wrote: > Yes, I can see it. > > On Fri, Mar 22, 2019 at 1:16 PM Pierre Tardy <tar...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Hi Rajdeep. >> I commented in the code. Do you see the comments? >> >> https://github.com/rajdeepbharati/buildbot-vue-plugin-boilerplate/commit/a1ff8178a327b52757d63e907036b6586a9cf5cc >> >> Pierre >> >> On Fri, Mar 22, 2019 at 8:35 AM Pierre Tardy <tar...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> Vue and React are the two major JS frameworks in 2018/2019. React is >>> still the major one, probably thanks to the fact that react-native is very >>> useful for mobile. So learning react allows you to make both webapps and >>> mobile apps (even if you cannot really share UI code between the two >>> frameworks) >>> >>> For the web, I like Vue better, recommend it and use it for all my new >>> web projects, because I think it is easier to use, and produce less complex >>> code for simple projects. >>> I think react best practices are oriented more toward very large web >>> apps, and using them for smaller apps is for me a waste of ressource. >>> React indeed only support one way binding, and forces people to use >>> state store like redux, which is for me very hard to use right, and >>> requires lots of boilerplate code. >>> >>> On the contrary, vue.js scales better and allows you to write clean and >>> readable code for small components, thanks to its support for two way >>> binding. >>> It is in my opinon easier for the beginner as its basic concepts are >>> simple to comprehend, and harder to make it wrong. >>> Vue still supports state store with vuex, which you can use when your >>> app is large enough to require it. >>> >>> So I think vue is the best compromise between ideas from angular and >>> ideas from react. >>> >>> This is good for a novice web developer to have experience in both, >>> hence I asked Rajdeep to also consider vue. >>> I challenged him to adapt the boilerplate to vue, because I was >>> impressed he was able to set up so quickly. >>> So I suggested a bit harder challenge to test how far we can go in the >>> expectations. This is fine to struggle on a challenge, or else it is not a >>> challenge :) >>> >>> Finally, challenge aside, you may decide which framework you want to use >>> in your project I don't want to force you :) >>> >>> >>> Pierre >>> >>> >>> On Fri, Mar 22, 2019 at 5:13 AM Mojca Miklavec <mo...@macports.org> >>> wrote: >>> >>>> Dear Pierre, >>>> >>>> Out of curiosity: what is the difference between the two frameworks? I >>>> mean, not technical difference, but I assume that the solution would only >>>> be provided / written in one of the frameworks? Is Vue.js your internal >>>> preference or newer trend over React.js? (I have some experience with >>>> React, none with Vue.) >>>> >>>> Mojca >>>> >>> -- >>> >>> >>> -- >> >> >> --