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Full-Stack Vue.js 2 and Laravel 5

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<strong>Laravel</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Vue</strong><br />

<strong>Laravel</strong> may seem like a monolithic framework because it includes features for<br />

building almost any kind of web application. Under the hood, though, <strong>Laravel</strong> is<br />

a collection of many separate modules, some developed as part of the <strong>Laravel</strong><br />

project <strong>and</strong> some from third-party authors. Part of what makes <strong>Laravel</strong> great is<br />

its careful curation <strong>and</strong> seamless connection of these constituent modules.<br />

Since <strong>Laravel</strong> version 5.3, <strong>Vue</strong>.<strong>js</strong> has been the default frontend framework<br />

included in a <strong>Laravel</strong> installation. There's no official reason why <strong>Vue</strong> was chosen<br />

over other worthy options, such as React, but my guess is that it's because <strong>Vue</strong><br />

<strong>and</strong> <strong>Laravel</strong> share the same philosophy: simplicity <strong>and</strong> an emphasis on the<br />

developer experience.<br />

Whatever the reason, <strong>Vue</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Laravel</strong> offer an immensely powerful <strong>and</strong> flexible<br />

full-stack framework for developing web applications.

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