HTMX has a ceiling on how interactive/complex you can make your site [1]. If you know you will never need to exceed those sure. However I like to use nextjs as it gives me the peace of mind I will always be able to pivot or implement whatever the customer wants.[1] https://htmx.org/essays/why-gumroad-didnt-choose-htmx/
recursivedoubts|1 year ago
it very much depends on the type of app you are building, but I think many web applications could at least start with htmx and then, when more complex user interactions present themselves, use an island of interactivity approach that localizes the complexity.
this keeps overall system complexity as low as possible for as long as possible, and you may never need to go beyond htmx, which can lead to a much less complicated codebase [3]
[1] - https://htmx.org/essays/when-to-use-hypermedia/
[2] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_aren%27t_gonna_need_it
[3] - https://htmx.org/essays/a-real-world-react-to-htmx-port/
terandle|1 year ago
1. HTMX itself
2. Your backend language Go/Java/whatever
3. Whatever JS framework for your interactivity islands
But yes we are all on the same team here of reducing complexity in the codebase and if HTMX works for you go for it.