css-in-js
MobX
css-in-js | MobX | |
---|---|---|
3 | 45 | |
5,532 | 27,232 | |
- | 0.3% | |
0.0 | 8.0 | |
about 3 years ago | 5 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
MIT 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.
css-in-js
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Front-end Guide
As you might have realized by now, the front end ecosystem is saturated with tools, and unsurprisingly, tools have been invented to partially solve some of the problems with writing CSS at scale. "At scale" means that many developers are working on the same large project and touching the same stylesheets. There is no community-agreed approach on writing CSS in JS at the moment, and we are hoping that one day a winner would emerge, just like Redux did, among all the Flux implementations. For now, we are banking on CSS Modules. CSS modules is an improvement over existing CSS that aims to fix the problem of global namespace in CSS; it enables you to write styles that are local by default and encapsulated to your component. This feature is achieved via tooling. With CSS modules, large teams can write modular and reusable CSS without fear of conflict or overriding other parts of the app. However, at the end of the day, CSS modules are still being compiled into normal globally-namespaced CSS that browsers recognize, and it is still important to learn and understand how raw CSS works.
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Why are "CSS classes generally better for performance than inline styles." ~ from react docs
There are a myriad of CSS-in-JS tools, many of which are zero-runtime giving you all the benefits of authoring in a single file without the drawbacks of inline styles. That's how I prefer to do my CSS with React anyway... Vanilla Extract and/or Linaria are my current favorites.
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Why was CSS-In-JS ever a thing?
One thing I think you're really missing is what the output is of CSS-in-JS. There are tens of CSS-in-JS frameworks that can output anything from: CSS Module like classes (Linaria, Vanilla Extract), Atomic Classes (StyleX, PreStyle), to the more traditional (Styled Components, Emotion) many with zero runtime cost (ie no JS bloat). That's why I say CSS-in-JS is primarily about developer experience... the output can often be whatever you want it to be.
MobX
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Getting started with TiniJS framework
States can also be organized in some central places (aka. stores). You can use Tini Store (very simple, ~50 lines) or other state management solutions such as MobX, TinyX, ...
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Episode 24/13: Native Signals, Details on Angular/Wiz, Alan Agius on the Angular CLI
Similarly to Promises/A+, this effort focuses on aligning the JavaScript ecosystem. If this alignment is successful, then a standard could emerge, based on that experience. Several framework authors are collaborating here on a common model which could back their reactivity core. The current draft is based on design input from the authors/maintainers of Angular, Bubble, Ember, FAST, MobX, Preact, Qwik, RxJS, Solid, Starbeam, Svelte, Vue, Wiz, and moreβ¦
- 5 Alternatives to Redux for React State Management
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Redux 101
MobX
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React State Management in 2024
Mutable-based: leverages proxy to create mutable data sources which can be directly written to or reactively read from. Candidates in this group are MobX and Valtio.
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Show HN: Cami.js β A No Build, Web Component Based Reactive Framework
Looks good! FWIW I always felt the observable pattern much more intuitive than the redux/reducer style. Something like https://mobx.js.org/
Things get hairy in both, but redux pattern feels so ridiculously ceremonially to effectively manage a huge global state object with a false sense of "purity".
Observables otoh say "fuck it, I'm mutating everything, do what you want with it".
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State Management Alternatives: Best Tools for React Apps
MobX Documentation
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React native for Linux app development in 2023
There's also others libraries like https://github.com/mobxjs/mobx which aren't specific to RN but can be used in any JS environment.
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Is redux and thunks still used or are there other alternatives for it now?
Valtio is like simplified MobX
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What is React State Management?
Link: https://mobx.js.org
What are some alternatives?
vanilla-extract - Zero-runtime Stylesheets-in-TypeScript
zustand - π» Bear necessities for state management in React
crisp-react - React boilerplate written in TypeScript with a variety of Jamstack and full stack deployments. Comes with SSR and without need to learn a framework. Helps to split a monolithic React app into multiple SPAs and avoid vendor lock-in.
RxJS - A reactive programming library for JavaScript
linaria - Zero-runtime CSS in JS library
Recoil - Recoil is an experimental state management library for React apps. It provides several capabilities that are difficult to achieve with React alone, while being compatible with the newest features of React.
styled-components - Visual primitives for the component age. Use the best bits of ES6 and CSS to style your apps without stress π
riverpod - A reactive caching and data-binding framework. Riverpod makes working with asynchronous code a breeze.
ESLint - Find and fix problems in your JavaScript code.
valtio - π Valtio makes proxy-state simple for React and Vanilla
Rollup - Next-generation ES module bundler
Cycle.js - A functional and reactive JavaScript framework for predictable code