Hi I guess like many community members I'm fairly unhappy about the major breaks that were introduced with Angular 2. Even it might make sense from a technical perspective, it is fairly destructive for the community and all company having heavily invested in Angular (or planning to do so). The beta is now available for quite some time, and maybe it is time to reflect and priorize things. Because currently I do not have the impression that it is getting of the grounds.
- Angular 2.0 is in Beta, took quite some time, but great. - UI Grid: no resources/progress to do the migration - UI Boostrap: last comment (three months ago) mentions that they are waiting for further Angular 2 features. Resources are a problem as well. - Angular Material: early alpha stages and no clear commitment (it is supposed to be backed by Google, right?) - there is secondary Material implementation by JetBrains. Should we get started using this one and scrap the other one by Google? - Kendo has some stuff (thanks!), but this is only a thin wrapper around their JQuery framework, not native Angular components. If there are any plans and roadmaps here, it would be really great to have them on the website. I don't really see any (serious) project start considering Angular 2 before having proper UI support from libraries like the ones mentioned above. Maybe there is a possiblity to get those projects a boost. Or maybe it is time for React. Or maybe time to fork Angular 1.5 and do incremental updates in the right direction. Or change the organizational structure of Angular, because such things should not happen. I don't know. Feedback and guidance is very welcomed. Regards Adrian -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "AngularJS" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/angular. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
