daisyui
material-ui-docs
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daisyui | material-ui-docs | |
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248 | 121 | |
30,632 | 311 | |
- | 1.6% | |
9.8 | 10.0 | |
5 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Svelte | 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.
daisyui
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HTML-first, framework-agnostic implementation of shadcn/UI – franken/UI
DaisyUI offers zero-JS components
https://daisyui.com/
I used it for a small form + search result list recently and it works well enough for simple / static stuff.
But I think I'll still be reaching for a JS lib first since I'd miss things like inputs-with-autocomplete too much.
- Show HN: Open Source TailwindCSS UI Components
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How to use Tailwind with any CSS framework
Tailwind is great, but creating everything from scratch is annoying. A nice base of components which can be extended with tailwind would be great. There are a few tailwind frameworks like Flowbite, Daisy Ui, but I like Bulma, PicoCSS and Bootstrap.
- Ask HN: Freelance website builders/maintainers, what's in your 2024 toolkit?
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Building a Fast, Efficient Web App: The Technology Stack of PromptSmithy Explained
While I have experience with Tailwind and frontend development, I don’t really have the patience to use it. I usually end up using something like Mantine, which is a complete component library UI kit, or Daisy UI, which is a component library built on top of Tailwind. Shadcn/ui is quite similar to Daisy in this sense, but being able to customize the individual components, since they get installed to your components folder, made development more streamlined and more customizable. On top of that being able to change my components style with natural language thanks to v0 made development super easy and fast. Shadcn may be too minimalist of a style for some, but thanks to all the components being local, you can customize them quickly and easily!
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The Bulma CSS framework reaches 1.0
https://daisyui.com is a really great middle ground—you can move as fast as you would in Bulma, then drop down into the weeds with TW if you need it.
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Tailwind Color Palette Generator
If you're looking for grab and go components, Daisy UI or Flowbite might be more your speed, I've used both with minimal headache.
https://daisyui.com/
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DaisyUI + Alpine.js + Codehooks.io - the simple web app trio
This guide is tailored for front-end developers looking to explore the smooth integration of DaisyUI's stylish components, Alpine.js's minimalist reactive framework, and the straightforward back-end capabilities of Codehooks.io.
- DaisyUI: The most popular component library for Tailwind CSS
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Shadcn: Beautifully designed components that you can copy-paste into your apps
Others:
- https://daisyui.com/
material-ui-docs
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Ask HN: Can anyone suggest few open source projects for SaaS Boilerplate?
For the UI, MUI is a huge time saver. It's open-core and thoroughly excellent: https://mui.com/
They also have a lot of pre-built dashboards that tie into various cloud vendors (typically not FOSS though).
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Ask HN: Anybody Using Htmx on the Job?
(My opinion only, please treat it as just one person's thought process, not some eternal truth)
As a frontend dev, for me it's primarily just an ecosystem thing. There's nothing wrong with HTMX or any other solution, like Ruby on Rails or Hotwire or even other JS frameworks like Angular or Gatsby, but they are not really what I see in the majority of the web dev ecosystem.
By ecosystem, I mean this:
- Developers are easy to find & hire for, and can work on existing code without much training because there are (relatively) standardized practices
- For any common problem, I can easily reuse (or at least learn from the source for) a package on NPM
- For any uncommon problem, I can find multiple robust discussion about it on various forums, Stack, etc. And ChatGPT probably has a workable overview.
- I can reasonably expect medium-term robust vendor support, not just from the framework developers but various hosts, third-party commercial offerings (routers, state management, UI libs, CMSes, etc.), i.e., it's going to stay a viable ecosystem for 3-5 years at least
- I don't have to reinvent the wheel for every new project / client, and can spin up a working prototype in a few minutes using boilerplates and 1-click deploys
I've been building websites since I was a kid some 30 years ago, first using Perl and cgi-bin and then PHP, and evolved my stack with it over time.
I've never been as productive as I am in the modern React ecosystem, especially with Next or Vite + MUI (https://mui.com/). Primarily this is because it allows me to build on top of other people's work and spend time only on the business logic of my app, at a very high level of abstraction (business components) and with a very high likelihood of being able find drop-in solutions for most common needs. I'm not reinventing the wheel constantly, or dealing with low-level constructs like manually updating the DOM. Or worse, dealing with server issues or updating OS packages.
What used to take days/weeks of setup now takes one click and two minutes, and I can have a useable prototype up in 2-3 hours. Because 95%+ of my codebase isn't mine anymore; I can just reuse what someone else built, and then reframe it for my own needs. And when someone else needs to continue the work, they can just pick up where I left off with minimal onboarding, because they probably already have React knowledge.
I think React, for all its faults, has just reached a point of saturation where it's like the old "nobody ever got fired for buying IBM", i.e., it's a safe, proven bet for most use cases. It may or may not be the BEST bet for any project, but it's probably good enough that it would at least warrant consideration, especially if the other stacks have less community/ecosystem support.
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Material UI vs. Chakra UI: Which One to Choose?
Explore Material UI: Material UI Documentation
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Learn CSS Layout the Pedantic Way
- UI kit (I personally have good experience with React Material UI - https://mui.com/; there is also https://tanstack.com/)
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Is wacat tool usefull in web application normal or security testing?
the network is settled (I got the code from some discussion group). But nothing works. Playwright has also
page.waitForLoadState({ waitUntil: "domcontentloaded" }); etc.
but they are not working for my test cases.
2)
I have noticed that https://mui.com/ have dropdown menus, which implementation is far from normal html option. Mui uses some kind
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Ask HN: Who is hiring? (February 2024)
MUI | Remote UTC-6 to +5 | Multiple roles | Full time | https://mui.com/
I'm a co-founder and the CEO of MUI. Our objective in the short term is to become the UI toolkit for React, unifying the fragmented ecosystem of dependencies into a single set of simple, beautiful, consistent, and accessible React components. In the longer term, our goal is to make building great web UIs quicker, simpler, and accessible to more people through a low-code platform for developers.
Some things we’re proud of:
- 25% of the downloads that React receives.
- 1M developers on our documentation every month.
- Solid financials: profitable
If this sounds interesting to you, we are hiring for: UI Engineers, Product Engineers, Developer Advocate / Content Engineer:
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How To Write Material UI Components Like Radix UI And Why Component Composition Matters?
Here, at Woovi, our design system has been wrote using [MUI](https://mui.com/. But, in my opinion, I have some pain points considering how MUI built their components, most focusing on the fact of how they expose their component APIs and how they handle the component structure.
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Ask HN: What's the Point of Material Design You?
My feeling as a frontend dev was that Material Design You is just run of the mill enshittification at Google. Around the time that came out, Google also started to hide more buttons in the UI, made the drop down shade much more clumsy, got rid of the excellent Pixel fingerprint scanner, etc.
It felt to me like some other busy body design team had to show innovation and so made Material You adopt your wallpaper colors (in some ugly variation). It was like the MySpaceification of Android.
Material Design spawned some of my favorite projects, like MUI: https://mui.com/
That tracks Material v2 (pre you) and IMO is the best web UI currently available. There's some tentative work on adding Material You, but I hope they don't. It's a step backward IMO, form over function and against the original spirit of Material as a usability design library. https://github.com/mui/material-ui/issues/29345
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33 React Libraries Every React Developer Should Have In Their Arsenal
5.material-ui
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The 20 most used React libraries
@material-ui: Offers Material Design-inspired UI components for modern aesthetics. Learn more
What are some alternatives?
flowbite - Open-source UI component library and front-end development framework based on Tailwind CSS
shadcn/ui - Beautifully designed components that you can copy and paste into your apps. Accessible. Customizable. Open Source.
headlessui - Completely unstyled, fully accessible UI components, designed to integrate beautifully with Tailwind CSS.
MudBlazor - Blazor Component Library based on Material design with an emphasis on ease of use. Mainly written in C# with Javascript kept to a bare minimum it empowers .NET developers to easily debug it if needed.
Material UI - Ready-to-use foundational React components, free forever. It includes Material UI, which implements Google's Material Design.
nextui - 🚀 Beautiful, fast and modern React UI library.
theme-change - Change CSS theme with toggle, buttons or select using CSS custom properties and localStorage
mantine - A fully featured React components library
fullcalendar - Full-sized drag & drop event calendar in JavaScript
Foundation - The most advanced responsive front-end framework in the world. Quickly create prototypes and production code for sites that work on any kind of device.