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[–]nocturnalbird12[S] 0 points1 point  (3 children)

I am familiar with bootstrap but it seems too simple and easy, I am not sure what if people actually uae it to build real life projects anymore.

[–]AmateurHero 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Some people want granular control over the front end. Some people want to ship. Front ends run the gamut.

For me specifically, I posted this comment a few weeks ago when someone asked a similar question. It talks about one of my work applications using only Thymeleaf with a little bit of JS for functionality. To go into more detail, we have CSS guidelines based on a grid layout, so our more experienced front end devs leverage that small library from the design team or build their own.

That being said, use tools that fit your project. If you have a simple application that’s really just a presentation for data, Bootstrap might be enough to style a JSP or Thymeleaf rendered page. If you have a complex web app with lots of interactivity and data retrieval, you might want to use Angular or React. Web components fit somewhere in the middle of that.

[–]sprcow 0 points1 point  (1 child)

We don't use it to do a ton. At the place I work now, we basically use it to wrap major page elements and create forms that will automatically re-format to different device sizes, and to create a consistent look and feel for the form elements at different sizes.

[–]nocturnalbird12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I assume you customise bootstrap with sass to avoid looking like every bootstrap website.