![]() I think this my biggest problem with Drupal. WP isn't going away and learning to use it well is worth learning IMO and that's what the OP is asking about. The market share of WP alone is enough reason to know WP, but I don't do this as a hobby or work for a tech startup. Calling something like WooCommerce shit makes you look like a clown. I do hope WP modernizes at some point.Īnd you'll HAVE to interact with other plugins (which are also shit). WordPress has fundamental architectural issues you can't fix with plugins because the core domain model is shit, and the plugin API is also shit.įinally something we agree no. So resources, tutorials, finding other developers to work with is easy for YOU AND YOUR CLIENT. For many of them WP backend is familiar and easy to use. I'm not using WordPress, I'm just running my code alongside WordPress. That doesn't mean Laravel is garbage because I had to work within some abomination of an application built on it, but I can see where it could easily create an opinion like this so I'm not really holding that against anyone.Ĭan I cannibalize it from inside-out and create a system in a system that does anything I want? Sure. You're acting like other CMS's and frameworks are exempt from this, lol. ![]() I've had to jump into garbage Laravel and Symfony abominations. Your opinion of WP is based off an existing project. WordPress was precisely as terrible as I expected it to be and I haven't touched it since. Not sure if you're following the thread but the overall theme is both me and the original poster joined specific WordPress project(s) without actually intending to make it a career.
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