> Because it'll be rewritten by later developers using commonly-used tools.
Everything will eventually be rewritten so this isn't much of an argument... What's "common" today won't be that way forever, likely not even for a couple of years (which is the whole point).
There's no reason to use a particular tool because it's common. A proper developer uses the tool that is right. If that happens to be old, so be it. An engineer should be able to decide what to use based on merits of tools not just picking up the new shiny.
Everything will eventually be rewritten so this isn't much of an argument... What's "common" today won't be that way forever, likely not even for a couple of years (which is the whole point).
There's no reason to use a particular tool because it's common. A proper developer uses the tool that is right. If that happens to be old, so be it. An engineer should be able to decide what to use based on merits of tools not just picking up the new shiny.