esprima
buefy
esprima | buefy | |
---|---|---|
2 | 17 | |
405 | 9,517 | |
- | 0.1% | |
0.0 | 8.4 | |
almost 3 years ago | 10 days ago | |
TypeScript | Vue | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
esprima
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NPM package ‘ua-parser-JS’ with more than 7M weekly download is compromised
> check out the Web X-Ray repo <https://github.com/mozilla/goggles.mozilla.org/>.
Thanks for example. Peeking a bit under the hood, it appears to be due to transitive dependencies referencing github urls (and transient ones at that) instead of semver, which admittedly is neither standard nor good practice...
FWIW, simply removing `"grunt-contrib-jshint": "~0.4.3",` from package.json and related jshint-related code from Gruntfile was sufficient to get `npm install` to complete successfully. The debugging just took me a few minutes grepping package-lock.json for the 404 URL in question (https://github.com/ariya/esprima/tarball/master) and tracing that back to a top-level dependency via recursively grepping for dependent packages. I imagine that upgrading relevant dependencies might also do the trick, seeing as jshint no longer depends on esprima[0].
I'm not sure how representative this particular case is to the sort of issues you run into, but I'll tell that reproducibility issues can get a lot worse in ways that committing deps doesn't help (for example, issues like this one[1] are nasty to narrow down).
But assuming that installation in your link just happens to have a simple fix and that others are not as forgiving, how is committing node_modules supposed to help here if you're saying you can't even get it to a working state in the first place? DO you own the repo in order to be able to make the change? Or are you mostly just saying that hindsight is 20-20?
[0] https://github.com/jshint/jshint/blob/master/package.json#L4...
[1] https://github.com/node-ffi-napi/node-ffi-napi/issues/143
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Validating JSON Data in typescript and return line number and position
okk i found out another one called esprima i think i am going to use it
buefy
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Seriously weird issue - same build behaving differently in different places
I looked into Buefy, which has great and accessible source code btw, and my hunch was correct. See line 184 at this link: https://github.com/buefy/buefy/blob/dev/src/components/carousel/CarouselList.vue
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Top UI libraries for Vue JS in 2023
Buefy: A lightweight UI library that provides a range of customizable UI components, including forms, buttons, and navbars.
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Any UI framework for Vue that isn't so opinionated it can't be customized? - Also, what's it like working with your preferred framework?
Back in the day I used Buefy https://buefy.org/ which is a Vue version of Bulma. I like it, I'd say it was easy to implement and I could change the style a bit without too many lines of code.
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What are these #hash references in template tags ?
I'm learning Vue and today noticed something I hadn't seen before, by Buefy component templates, namely hash-prefixed attributes on template tags e.g.
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FYI
Encountered this issue as we're looking into solutions for migrating a Vue 2 + Buefy codebase over to Vue 3. The maintainer is actively working on Oruga, which for the most part, has a very similar api to Buefy components and is pretty close in terms of component parity. I only found out about Oruga through this pinned issue in the Buefy repo.
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Is there a way to use `Vue.compile()` within Nuxt?
That will render any Vue components referenced within the content returned from the API. In my case, it contained Buefy component references e.g.:
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What are the best CSS frameworks?
I like Bulma and I've used it on most recent projects. It feels lighter and easier to customize than Bootstrap. Buefy is vue components based on Bulma. It's pretty good, but lately I've been using Livewire.
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Bootstrap vs Tailwind
Personally I don't like either. Bootstrap seems too bloated and cookie-cutter, and Tailwind is inline styles and clutter. Lately I've used Bulma (CSS framework) and Buefy (Bulma + Vue) on a couple of projects. I also like the look of Pure CSS, but I haven't used it.
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Why are none of the good UI frameworks compatible with Vue 3 yet?
It seems that the good UI frameworks are only available for Vue 2 at present. Bootstrap (Bootstrap-vue), Semantic UI (Semantic UI Vue), Bulma (Buefy), Material (Vuetify) all only support Vue 2.
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The Ultimate List of 7 Perfect Vue 3 UI Libraries for every project
7 - Buefy
What are some alternatives?
ace - Ace (Ajax.org Cloud9 Editor)
vuetify - 🐉 Vue Component Framework
vim.js
Quasar Framework - Quasar Framework - Build high-performance VueJS user interfaces in record time
CodeMirror - In-browser code editor (version 5, legacy)
bootstrap-vue - BootstrapVue provides one of the most comprehensive implementations of Bootstrap v4 for Vue.js. With extensive and automated WAI-ARIA accessibility markup.
medium-editor - Medium.com WYSIWYG editor clone. Uses contenteditable API to implement a rich text solution.
primevue - Next Generation Vue UI Component Library
TinyMCE - The world's #1 JavaScript library for rich text editing. Available for React, Vue and Angular
React PDF viewer - A React component to view a PDF document
bootstrap-wysiwyg