Today, front-end development and JavaScript are synonymous. And while a hot, new, cutting-edge JavaScript framework or ecosystem tool seems to arrive every few months, promising faster build times or snappier end-user experiences, “plain” React and React-based frameworks like Next.js continue to dominate. When we look at established browser UI frameworks used by Sentry customers, it’s no surprise that the React ecosystem leads—by a lot.
At Sentry, we look at both industry metrics and our own internal SDK adoption data to decide which frameworks to invest in. And with 3.5 million developers and 85 thousand organizations across 150 countries sending us ~800 billion errors and transactions each month, we have a lot of data telling us what developers want.
In this article, we draw on this data to identify some interesting trends about where front-end frameworks are headed, and why we think React-based frameworks like Next.js—frameworks that make it easy to render web pages on the server—could paradoxically be the future of front-end development.
‘Plain’ React leads… for now
React makes it fast and relatively easy to create dynamic UIs, leaving manual DOM manipulation out of sight and out of mind. While React developers may not spend much time debugging issues from React’s underlying library, errors still happen. And since Sentry tells its users the “when, what, and why” behind application errors, we can measure how often React-based project errors happen.
Errors aside, there’...
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