In general Next.js has so many layers of abstraction that 99.9999% of projects don't need. And the ones that do are probably better off building a bespoke solution from lower level parts.
Next.js is easily the worst technology I've ever used.
In general Next.js has so many layers of abstraction that 99.9999% of projects don't need. And the ones that do are probably better off building a bespoke solution from lower level parts.
Next.js is easily the worst technology I've ever used.
Things will get far worse before they get better. Right now, online courses such as the ones in PluralSight are pushing Next.js on virtually all courses related to React. I have no idea what ill-advised train of thought resulted in this sad state of affairs but here we are.
It's pretty absurd to have such a broad range of web solutions, and think the same solution can cover everything.
One of the factors is that web dev pushes for a complete separation of concerns, and thus allows frontend developers to specialize in front end development. Therefore it becomes far easier to hire someone to do frontend work with a webdev background than a win32/MFC background.
Number of applicants is also a big factor. There is far more demand for webdev than pure GUI programming. You can only hire people who show up, and if no one shows up then you need to scramble.
Frontend development is also by far the most expensive part of a project. In projects which use low-level native frameworks you are forced to hire a team for each target platform. Adopting technologies that implement GUIs with webpages running in a WebView allow projects to halve the cost. This is also why technologies like React Native shine.
Also, apps like Visual Studio Code prove that webview-based apps can be both nice to look at and be performant.
It's not capabilities. It's mainly the economics.
Then there came small web applications, and still no "front-end developers", since functionality could only work on the server.
It's only when AJAX was introduced in the mid 2000's that you could start to talk about "front-end developers".
By that time, win32 and MFC was old. We had Java, C# with .net framework, etc.