At home I use Win10 Pro and have had no issues. I use Hyper-V to manage my virtual machines (usually to try out software, set up test servers, etc. without polluting my machine). Recently I've been using the Linux sub-system (
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-win10) for Linux oriented stuff. The update cycle can be a little maddening/annoying, but it has not stopped anything from working yet (home machine is an i7-3770k, 8GB RAM, 1TB HD, dual monitor setup).
At work. Now that is another story. We've used Win 10 Pro since when Win 10 first came out. Well, not quite. Not until the second update to Windows 10, did Windows 10 actually work properly with roaming profiles (at least for us), which was completely mind blowing (that it did not work right out of the box). As much as I would like to love Edge, I hate it (in a business environment). Out of the blue it will quit working (it has done this since Windows 10 came out). And then nothing fixes it. Well two things: an in-place upgrade or, if the in-place upgrade fails, a full re-install of Windows. This makes absolutely no sense. None whatsoever. And I've tried all the crazy things that you can find posted on the internet from Microsoft. Just today (yes, TODAY April 12th, 2018), my Edge quit working. This is on a system that had Windows 10 Pro freshly installed less than two months ago. And I just got used to using it (Edge) again. Oh well. Luckily I also have Firefox and Chrome installed. Oh yeah, the "build" in apps usually are no better off (various random pieces will quit working). On this machine (a fresh install, but an existing roaming profile), the build in calculator is missing (the APP one). I have no clue why. It worked on my previous machine (a VM on a Mac Mini).
As on OS itself, I've had virtually zero issues. The days of blue-screening or locking up seem to be gone (I've had some (across various machines at work), but they were all related to failing, misbehaving hardware (a major sore point was a batch of faulty 2TB Seagate drives)). For regular programs (non-APPS, actual programs), it is a great, stable platform (work machine is an all-in-one with i7-4770, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, WQHD Monitor and two FHD Monitors, one connected via HDMI, the other via a USB3 DisplayLink hub).