Everything is a circle in web development. It appears to take about five to ten years for developer personnel to turn over close to 100%.
And so the cycle continues, with old ideas dusted off or rediscovered, the original flaws in them rediscovered, the reaction to those flaws, traveling well-trodden paths, then the reaction to the reaction, "best practices" shaking out, an explosion of complexity, and then someone burns down the baroque cathedral of ideas with, if we're lucky, a slightly less flawed version of the original old idea.
I've now done ASP.NET long enough to see WebForms come in, reach high tide, recede before the new hotness of MVC, MVC decline in favor of WebApi with monstrosities of JS frameworks in front of it, and now Razor Pages are coming back in as a simpler alternative, with concepts that an old WebForms developer from fifteen years ago wouldn't raise an eyebrow at.
Actually that is exactly what I thought when they introduced RazorPages as well.
I really like .NET Core but this RazorPages is just single worst "improvement" for the .NET Core platform.
I even remember watching the presentation on BUILD conference and nobody applauded at this "feature" when they graciously introduced it and you could feel the cringe. Scott even had to say "Isn't this awesome!?? Come on!".
No, Scott, it's not awesome. It's going backwards.
And so the cycle continues, with old ideas dusted off or rediscovered, the original flaws in them rediscovered, the reaction to those flaws, traveling well-trodden paths, then the reaction to the reaction, "best practices" shaking out, an explosion of complexity, and then someone burns down the baroque cathedral of ideas with, if we're lucky, a slightly less flawed version of the original old idea.
I've now done ASP.NET long enough to see WebForms come in, reach high tide, recede before the new hotness of MVC, MVC decline in favor of WebApi with monstrosities of JS frameworks in front of it, and now Razor Pages are coming back in as a simpler alternative, with concepts that an old WebForms developer from fifteen years ago wouldn't raise an eyebrow at.