Draper
Slim
Draper | Slim | |
---|---|---|
5 | 31 | |
5,202 | 5,274 | |
0.1% | 0.1% | |
0.0 | 7.8 | |
3 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
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.
Draper
-
From partials to ViewComponents: writing reusable front-end code in Rails
So what about the world outside Rails defaults? There are quite a few independent projects trying to help build components in the Rails view layer, among the more famous being Draper (utilizing the decorators pattern) or Cells (full-featured components in views). In the end, we decided to take a deeper look into a relatively new one – the ViewComponent framework.
-
Ruby on Rails View Patterns and Anti-patterns
If you are not a big fan of writing Rails custom helpers, you can always opt-in for a View Model pattern with the Draper gem. Or you can roll your own View Model pattern here, it shouldn't be that complicated. If you are just starting out with your web app, I suggest starting slowly by writing custom helpers and if that brings pain, turn to other solutions.
-
2 noob questions about app structure
The Draper gem is the one I'm familiar with which does this well, I'm sure there are others.
-
My Ruby on Rails stack for side projects in 2021
Don't introduce decorators and view models. Use helpers instead. Don't extract domain models. Put the code in the ActiveRecord models and the controllers. Don't reach for interactors to model your domain logic. Don't try to avoid duplication too early.
-
RoR Gems: Pin To Plane For Developing RoR Application
7. DRAPER
Slim
-
XRB alternatives - Haml, Slim, and Hamlit
4 projects | 30 Apr 2024
-
Building a syntax highlighting extension for VS Code
I spent a few days of my spare time building a VS Code extension that would bring better syntax highlighting for the Slim template language to the editor. I quite enjoyed most of the process so I’d like to share what I learned.
-
Rails 7.1 Released
I think they mean Server Side Rendering (normal rails controllers/views), and Slim is just the name of the templating engine. It's a little nicer than the default ERB. https://github.com/slim-template/slim
There's also SSR with react and other js frameworks, but I don't think that's what they meant.
-
How to build a website without frameworks and tons of libraries
I use something very similar on https://lunar.fyi and https://lowtechguys.com but I wouldn’t call this “simple” anymore.
They use Jinja templating, I prefer Slim (https://github.com/slim-template/slim#syntax-example) which has a more Pythonic syntax (there is plim [0] in Python for that)
I use Tailwind as well for terse styling and fast experimentation (allows me to write a darkMode-aware and responsive 100 line CSS in a single line with about 10 classes)
For interaction I can write CoffeeScript directly in the page [1] and have it compiled by plim.
I run a Caddy static server [2] and use Syncthing [3] to have every file save deployed instantly to my Hetzner server.
I use entr [4] and livereloadx [5] to rebuild the pages and do hot reload on file save. All the commands are managed in a simple Makefile [6]
———
You can already see how the footnotes take up a large chunk of this comment, this is not my idea of simple. Sure, the end result is readable static HTML and I never have to fight obscure React errors, but it’s a high effort setup for starters.
Simple for me would be: write markdown files for pages, a simple CSS for general styling (should be optional), click to deploy on my domain. Images should automatically be resized to multiple sizes and optimized, videos re-encoded for smaller filesize etc.
I have mostly implemented that for myself (https://notes.alinpanaitiu.com/How%20I%20write%20this%20blog...) but it feels fragile. I’d rather pay for a professional solution.
[0] https://plim.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
[1] https://github.com/FuzzyIdeas/lowtechguys/blob/main/src/rcmd...
[2] https://caddyserver.com/docs/command-line#caddy-file-server
[3] https://syncthing.net
[4] https://github.com/eradman/entr
[5] https://nitoyon.github.io/livereloadx/
[6] https://github.com/FuzzyIdeas/lowtechguys/blob/main/Makefile
-
Do Modern Programming Languages Have to Care About Line Length?
Checkout slim https://github.com/slim-template/slim it's a templating language
-
Hotwire Question - Controller Lifecycle
And this is what the HTML looks like (I'm using slim):
-
How to use View Transitions in Hotwire Turbo
The template renders the tag and inside it the link and the counter itself (the Slim template language and Tailwind styling are used here, hopefully the notation is sufficiently self-explaining):
-
Slim: A HTML Templating Language
In this part of the series, let's explore another popular templating language, Slim.
-
Pug: A HTML Templating Language
Templating languages are widely used in Web development and two of the most popular ones are Pug and Slim. In this series, we're going to learn the basics of these two and hopefully they would help improve your workflow further.
-
Template Engine with percent sign in Rails?
You may want to checkout slim I'v tried ERB, SLIM, and HAML and absolutely sware by slim it's very easy to use and saves a ton of typing compared to ERB.
What are some alternatives?
ActiveDecorator - ORM agnostic truly Object-Oriented view helper for Rails 4, 5, 6, and 7
Liquid - Liquid markup language. Safe, customer facing template language for flexible web apps.
jsonapi-serializer - A fast JSON:API serializer for Ruby (fork of Netflix/fast_jsonapi)
Haml - HTML Abstraction Markup Language - A Markup Haiku
ShowFor - Wrap your objects with a helper to easily show them
Hamlit - High Performance Haml Implementation
Simple Form - Forms made easy for Rails! It's tied to a simple DSL, with no opinion on markup.
Sanitize - Ruby HTML and CSS sanitizer.
Kaminari - ⚡ A Scope & Engine based, clean, powerful, customizable and sophisticated paginator for Ruby webapps
Tilt - Generic interface to multiple Ruby template engines
AASM - AASM - State machines for Ruby classes (plain Ruby, ActiveRecord, Mongoid, NoBrainer, Dynamoid)
tachyons - Functional css for humans