Well, you're suggesting a reason to choose Elm is stability - a lack of breaking changes. But Elm is actually notorious for its wildly unpopular, dramatic, community-fracturing breaking changes. Backwards compatibility is not a concern for them.
It's a little tricky though, because the comment you were replying to was talking about the lack of updates. And in that sense, Elm is now very stable - no breaking changes (or any changes at all!) in seven years and counting.
(Although, for all the complaints about the React ecosystem: you can still write class-style React components, even though they were effectively deprecated when hooks were introduced just over seven years ago.)
OTOH, we have this blog post suggesting development on Elm is kicking up again. Which means more breaking changes might be incoming.
Well, you're suggesting a reason to choose Elm is stability - a lack of breaking changes. But Elm is actually notorious for its wildly unpopular, dramatic, community-fracturing breaking changes. Backwards compatibility is not a concern for them.
It's a little tricky though, because the comment you were replying to was talking about the lack of updates. And in that sense, Elm is now very stable - no breaking changes (or any changes at all!) in seven years and counting.
(Although, for all the complaints about the React ecosystem: you can still write class-style React components, even though they were effectively deprecated when hooks were introduced just over seven years ago.)
OTOH, we have this blog post suggesting development on Elm is kicking up again. Which means more breaking changes might be incoming.