In the tech world, there is a constant flow of changes and keeping up with them means the choicefor tools and technologies which are the most appro...
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I noticed that .NET and Blazor are missing from the discussion, so I’d like to include some of the key benefits of learning Blazor and .NET:
Blazor has carved a niche in the Microsoft ecosystem, especially for developers who prefer C#. Its advantages include:
Growing Adoption: With WebAssembly maturing, Blazor is increasingly viable for high-performance web apps.
Seamless Integration: Works well with existing .NET libraries and tools.
Stable Ecosystem: Backed by Microsoft, Blazor will remain relevant for years, especially in enterprise development.
.Net is never invited to the cool kids table.
.NET might not always sit at the 'cool kids' table, but it’s a powerful and deserves recognition.
With Blazor, .NET has made significant strides in modern web development, enabling developers to build interactive web UIs using C# instead of JavaScript.
Where Laravel?
The best stack to learn depends on your needs and who wrote the post 😂
Yeha, that's true jasjajs 😂
🤣😂 The author's suggestions are on point notwithstanding.
This is AI generated content, right?
You are in the age of ai. You can't expect human generated content now. One day, foods will be AI generated 🤭
I subscribed to this blog channel because I want to read blogs written by software developers from their experience. I have a lot of AI models in my phone/PC, therefore i don't have to come here to read AI generated content. Bloggers can use AI to brainstorm ideas for their blog but they shouldn't copy and paste everything from the AI. Do you know that AI generated content is very boring to read?
I'm sure we'll also soon begin to see AI generated comment sections that have no human responses as a part of their tapestry
Yeah.. and they didn't even bother reading it themself. For the Python-Django Stack:
LMAO
Where's golang?
Do not learn React. I can't In good conscience recommend this framework with all the messy code bases and anti patterns it causes.
Frameworks worth exploring:
Vue, Svelte, Nest.js, Django, Laravel, Flutter, Echo (Golang), Astro, Blazor
Try getting a svelte job in the UK.
Solid.js you forgot to mentioned
Very JS oriented list and one that I've seen since 2020.
My advice; Don't learn MongoDB or Firebase. I've never seen these used in customer environments. MongoDB as a document database has a very specific use case. People who start with Mongo also don't realize how hard it can be to manage the schema as your app grows. Firebase is simple to use but costs can get out of hand and it's a proprietary database.
Both of these are the typical "beginner suggestions", but have low value in real work life.
Where is Golang 🙆🏻♂️
Wow...no Django, htmx, tailwind, alpine/hyperscript stack...you really did disappoint.
Terrible article.
There is always something to add to this list... but some things can be useful
Free programming site:
programmingforbegin.blogspot.com/
Java full stack is also be better option
Django with Next.js ?
What happened to MEAN?
Stop playing
No Deno , Bun .... frameworks
No Astro js the coolest js frameworks IMO
No Laravel?
No Golang frameworks?
No .Net?
Why PEVN isn't mentioned?
I notice that RAILS is missing. Just a garbage heap of lousy 2025 trends being chased like sheep by low iq devs without having a flying clue what you’re doing or trying to accomplish. 👎🏻.
I'm currently on the Ai/Ml stack.
Learning python now, going to be the best this year
I was hoping to find golang somewhere. What happened?
Golang golang golang ....
Considering the fact that about 8 or 9 out the 12 on this list includes React, you should have just said "best React stacks to learn in 2025"