Interestingly, dot net core 2.0, which was released a couple of weeks ago,
only supports react,react+redux and angular 2/4 in its spa templates. They
will work against pure dot net core as well as dot net framework. Both Vue
and react are view only and require a dog's breakfast of technologies to
make up the stack, hence the inclusion of redux, which is now part of
Facebooks offering. Angular is the most complete/enterprise ready of all
the frameworks, but it has its own impediments, predominantly being it's
stupid syntax. Vue is out performing both angular and react at the moment
on github. But stars can be rigged, so I'm prepared to wait a bit longer
before taking a more serious look.

T.

On 24 Aug 2017 5:29 PM, "Greg Keogh" <gfke...@gmail.com> wrote:

> https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/which-javascript-framework-
>> should-i-choose-enterprise-tony-wright
>>
>
> Nice summary, but it seems to confirm my fears that the JS ecosystem is
> still devolving into more fragments. I mean, oh lord, not another one ...
> Vue.js -- *GK*
>

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