Not exactly Vue yet, as you mention, that's rather stretching it as Wappler, at the time of writing this, has no routing as yet, it has no component facilities, no slots, templates, can't load external pages, no way to organise functions/directives, other than inline etc, to name but a few, so it lacks the professional workflow of the mentioned front-end js frameworks such as Angular, React and Vue. It also uses propriatory coding which may possibly cause your client issues if you, as their web-developer, suddenly became ill or disappered completely, so think of your clients needs in all of this, not just your own. Where are they going to find another developer quickly that would understand the code. With Vue, React, Angular they would most likely be able to source a repalcement developer quite quickly given the popularity of those front end frameworks. I see this program suited to those who have reached their sell-by date in terms of their coding ability/progress or those who no nothing about coding - let's be honest we are deluged with countless workflows these days it's hard to keep up so resorting to a program such as Wappler does make the process less stressful but as mentioned it does come with some biggish caveats, which need to be considered if you still regard yourself as professional or wanting to be professional. Its base front end html/css framework is Bootstrap 4 and it does not work 'visually' with previous Bootstrap versions, so if you have clients still with Bootstrap 3 websites youre out of luck if you want to maintain them. Personally I hate all Bootstrap as its a bloated framework, creating unnessary 'divs' in most instances. That coupled with the myriads of inline directives that the Wappler js framework creates can result in a very convoluted coding 'mess'. Does it have a place, for sure, it will fit neatly and nicely into a niche market aimed at mostly the amatuer market place. If you can look beyond the caveats it does have some rather nice easy to deploy components, slideshows, browsers animations, google maps etc and it makes back-end cms work really quite simple. Dont expect too much in terms of the code editor if you like working in code view, its a work in progress which hopefully will be improved in time. Would I use it 'never say never'. Maybe in the future.