Of course it is not. I see more clients moving back to it or moving to it for the first time. People, rightfully so imho, are starting to hate nextjs (and react is getting a bit of that). It is so much easier to get something running without errors in the logs, for <i>years</i> at a time, and without weird frontend bugs with laravel than it is with nextjs/react. And people are starting to see that; usually after having multiple projects in nextjs over the years, teams changed and disappeared and then someone redeploys, nothing works and there we are.
> the closest someone will probably give as an explanation is a massive rambling blog post written years ago<p>That blog post is long, but definitely not rambling, and unlike the above quote, is done in good faith. PHP night have improved, but if it has it will likely have used that blog post as a reference.
Kinda ironic that because of this post I went to check out php.net for the first time in like a decade, and it turns out the site is down. Doesn't exactly instill confidence that the project is alive and well.
One thing PHP got right is its 'PHP must die' mode of operation where every request spawns a new process (ok, not a process anymore but still an isolated execution environment that lasts until the response is served.<p>Java, Ruby, C#, etc are application servers and this massively complicates everything.
The title is clickbait (no surprise there!).<p>PHP has its warts, but it also has uses and it is often still my go-to language when developing for web. That is, when I do not go for OpenResty (Lua) or Elixir (Phoenix). Sometimes what I really want is PHP.
Should you re-submit it, put the original title within the quotes for "read interpreting, not literally" rhetoric,<p><i>"PHP is Legacy, in 2024"</i><p>This is an exception that calls to be editorialized. The original title is as-if a quote, which the original writers omitted to mark as such.
Stuff becomes legacy not because of the language, but because of outdated libraries or frameworks or unavailable/uninterested developers. For me PHP is legacy, because I refused to work on PHP codebases, except I find someone who's willing to do the job for me.