Is Laravel the happiest developer community on the planet? #63475
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Laravel, the popular PHP framework known for its elegant syntax and developer-friendly features, has garnered a reputation not only for its technical prowess but also for its vibrant and enthusiastic community. While it might be a stretch to definitively proclaim it as "the happiest developer community on the planet," there are certainly several aspects that contribute to the positivity and satisfaction within the Laravel community. |
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Indeed, Laravel makes life easier ! |
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Laravel's syntax is very clean and easy to read. This makes it a pleasure to write code in Laravel. |
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Whenever I start a new project with laravel I feel like 40% of the job is already done, the next 10% when I customize and configure it the rest 50% is the actual application. Why would I waste my time setting up repetitive tasks and worrying about non-functional aspects of the app before I actually see an MVP of it. With laravel you can be sure the boilerplate setup is clean, following standards, tested well and reliable allowing you to quickly bootstrap a powerful starting point before adding feature number one! You can't just stop loving it. |
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Laravel's community is known for being active and supportive. |
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I remember that when I learned PHP, it was once learning Laravel and I liked it a lot, I used it for several recruitment tests and they worked for me. |
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im working with laravel for about a year now, and i can tell it is developer-friendly indeed |
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After I learned 1-year php, I decided this summer to start my first Laravel project and I can say it's a lot better going for a framework. I already deployed the project, so I can say I am pretty happy using Laravel :) |
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Honestly, the best framework now is Django, not Laravel. What I hate about Laravel is that I just started learning version 8, and then version 9 is coming. It's not really stable, and I see PHP as a language I find frustrating 👍 . |
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Laravel is a powerful PHP framework that allows you to build web applications quickly and efficiently. One of the ways to make your Laravel application more object-oriented is to use object-oriented programming (OOP) techniques to organize your code. |
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are companies still using PHP for app? |
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👋 Hey y'all!
@mikethemelanson with GitHub's The ReadME Project here again to let you know about our August release.
This month, @klintron dives into Laravel, the highly-opinionated PHP framework with first-party support for a wide range of features, and asks if it's the happiest developer community on the planet. Though many popular projects lose their luster over time, Laravel is still a fan favorite, with the community in a seemingly perpetual honeymoon period. How does the Laravel community maintain such a beloved platform? By ignoring trends and sweating the details.
We also have a guide from @drupal Core Accessibility Maintainer Mike Gifford (@mgifford), who argues that it's essential to treat accessibility issues as bugs, not mere feature requests. And while we're talking about accessibility, this month's developer story is a profile of Anton Mihorodchenko (@GreenWizard2015), a Ukrainian developer with cerebral palsy who uses AI to not only better communicate and code, but is also using AI to build adaptive tooling for other developers and people with disabilities. Anton's story also includes the latest in GitHub's Coding Accessibility video series, so head on over and give it a watch!
Taking time to build what's next
Over the next few months The ReadME Project team is focusing on new content, new formats, and new ways to serve you as an audience.
As we take the time to dream and build, we want your feedback! Tell us what you would love to see! Who would you love to learn from? What content would make your engineering life better? Your feedback is incredibly valuable.
Drop us a line at [email protected] to let us know how YOU want to see The ReadME Project evolve. As always, follow us @github on LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter for updates, polls, and even more opportunities to connect and engage with the open source community on GitHub. And check your inbox for special newsletters, spotlights, and new content over the coming months.
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