JavaFX has been released a long time ago. But I didn't hear about any popular or big production ready projects built with this technology.
Originally developed by Oracle and made an official part of the JRE with Java 8, JavaFX was removed again with Java 11 and continued as the open source project OpenJFX - still mainly maintained by Oracle, but in cooperation with Gluon and other active participants.
GWT, Vaadin, Qt, JSF, and Electron are the most popular alternatives and competitors to JavaFX.
If you need to make a desktop application, then yes absolutely it is worth learning. Java + JavaFX is a very strong platform for application development. If cross-platform applications are needed, I think it is the best option.
Mobile application offerings for both IOS and Android continue increasing each year. In this three-part series, I'll show how to use JavaFX for mobile app development: JavaFX looks great and runs on both mobile platforms. You use the same JavaFX code targeting Google Play and Apple App stores.
Opening the answer to everyone...
Though this question is primarily opinion-based
, but I would still like to throw some examples. These may not be very popular, but are good enough to be used by a few people:
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