Over the last few years, frontend development has quietly entered a new phase. React, once the undisputed champion of JavaScript frameworks, is now being challenged. Modern browsers are more capable, developers are more discerning, and the jig is almost up.
At the same time, various tools are showing that there’s more than one way to build fast, maintainable, interactive apps.
So is React being replaced? Not quite. But we are seeing a shift — a post-React era — not defined by React’s disappearance, but by its loss of monopoly. This…