dub
primitives
Our great sponsors
dub | primitives | |
---|---|---|
34 | 26 | |
16,148 | 14,192 | |
8.4% | 4.4% | |
10.0 | 8.0 | |
2 days ago | 9 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | 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.
dub
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5 Open-Source Next.js Projects Rocking 2024 (Learn the Patterns!) 🚀
Github Repository: Here
- Dub.co – Link Management for Modern Marketing Teams
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From Messy to Memorable: Shorten Your Links, Boost Your Brand
Dub An open-source link management tool for modern marketing teams to create, share, and track short links Introduction · Features · Tech Stack · Self-hosting · Contributing Introduction Dub.co is the open-source link management infrastructure for modern marketing teams. Features Advanced Analytics Branded Links QR Codes Personalization Team Collaboration Tech Stack Next.js – framework TypeScript – language Tailwind – CSS Upstash – redis Tinybird – analytics PlanetScale – database NextAuth.js – auth BoxyHQ – SSO/SAML Turborepo – monorepo Stripe – payments Postmark – emails Vercel – deployments Self-Hosting You can self-host Dub.co for greater control over your data and design. Read this guide to learn more. Contributing We love our contributors! Here's how you can contribute: Open an issue if you believe you've encountered a bug. Follow the local development guide to get your local dev environment set up. Make a pull request to add new features/make quality-of-life improvements/fix bugs. …
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15 open-source tools to elevate your software design workflow
Thank you so much for reading to the end. Of all the tools on this site, Penpot is my absolute favorite. Its modern UI and all the amazing tools at the cost of running a single docker command is a real catch! As a thank you, there's another tool I'd like to present. It's called Dub. It's a link-shortener tool with lots of advanced features for marketing teams and a perfect addition for Umami.
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Open Source alternatives to tools you Pay for
Dub - Open Source Alternative to Bitly
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9 Next.js Open Source Projects for Contributions 🚀🚀
GitHub: https://github.com/steven-tey/dub
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How to deal with routing between landing page & the actual app?
dub.sh - with redirection Redirects to app.dub.sh when you try to login github repo shows the app. in the app/ router, and domain in the [dub.sh] folder
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Looking for professional Open source apps
There are amazing open-source projects to learn from. Few are: - cal.com - dub.sh - highstorm.app
- Top GitHub repositories to learn modern React development
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Show HN: I open sourced the QR designer from my failed startup
Very cool stuff, thanks for open-sourcing this! Might incorporate it into Dub , an open-source link management tool that I'm building: https://github.com/steven-tey/dub
primitives
- Radix Primitives: an open-source UI component library
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React: Build your own composable, headless components
Fast forward to a week ago, I cloned the Reach UI and Radix UI codebase and started exploring. Large codebases are always difficult to comprehend. With some digging around and reverse engineering, I was able to create the first component listed in the Reach UI docs, the Accordion.
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Show HN: Radix Themes – A beautiful, open-source React component library
Hi HN! I'm Vlad, a designer and engineer on the Radix team (https://radix-ui.com). We just launched Radix Themes, an open source component library for building modern, accessible React apps.
Radix Themes is built on top of Radix Primitives (https://radix-ui.com/primitives), which companies like Vercel, CodeSandbox, and Supabase, among others, already use to power their interfaces.
Our goal is to help you focus on your product and build it faster instead of re-inventing common designs and working on the UI components over and over.
Under the hood, Radix Themes is built with TypeScript, React and vanilla CSS. All design tokens are CSS variables that you can tweak, overwrite, or use to build your own custom components with any styling solution that you like.
The idea to build Radix Themes emerged while working on our own design system at WorkOS (https://workos.com), which is the company behind Radix. There was hundreds of design details and edge cases that we had to take care of, so it still didn't feel like a solved problem.
We also were obsessed with getting the developer experience right. For every component we asked ourselves—what is the right API? What are the right props and parts? What should, and more importantly, shouldn’t be a part of this component? What API would make the code easy to understand and maintain, and what would put you into a messy situation that could bite when you don’t expect it?
With this approach, we used our own, battle-tested components that serve our paying users to kickstart Radix Themes.
I hope that you find Radix Themes useful. Right now, there’s 45 components, hundreds of carefully crafted variants, a few simple and powerful primitives for layout, and an extensive token system.
I would love to hear your feedback on our work and learn about your experiences with building UIs.
- 5 React Libraries to Level Up your Projects in 2023
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I'm building Radix Svelte, an unstyled UI component library with a focus on accessibility.
Other things that led me to choose this path were: Most libraries that are ports, official or not, use the original name (e.g. Svelte Material UI); Radix UI's license is fairly permissive (https://github.com/radix-ui/primitives/blob/main/LICENSE), which is why I also don't think it matters that it's a company behind it. Same as why I don't see an issue with the name Preact, for example.
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I made a tool for converting between different media formats (without uploading to a server)
For a react project I recommend https://radix-ui.com, it's got pretty good defaults
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List of free Tailwind UI component resources
radix-ui.com
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useControlledProps: Make any React Component Controlled/Uncontrolled
This is really cool, Radix UI uses a similar hook internally for their components. I like your implementation though.
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Is form handling always a pain in the ass in React?
Remix is a dream. Once combined with Radix Form Component it'll be freaking heaven. https://github.com/radix-ui/primitives/blob/form-rfc/rfcs/2023-radix-form-primitive.md
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Please give feedback on my personal company website
Looks like radix-ui.com, but a bit more boring tbh
What are some alternatives?
Shlink - The definitive self-hosted URL shortener
shadcn/ui - Beautifully designed components that you can copy and paste into your apps. Accessible. Customizable. Open Source.
taxonomy - An open source application built using the new router, server components and everything new in Next.js 13.
zag - Finite state machines for building accessible design systems and UI components.
linen.dev - Lightweight Google-searchable Slack alternative for Communities
headlessui - Completely unstyled, fully accessible UI components, designed to integrate beautifully with Tailwind CSS.
website - Website and documentation for Radix.
chakra-ui - ⚡️ Simple, Modular & Accessible UI Components for your React Applications
cmdk - Fast, unstyled command menu React component.
sveltekit-package-template - A barebones project that provides the essentials for writing highly-optimized, reusable packages in Svelte.
YOURLS - đź”— The de facto standard self hosted URL shortener in PHP
shoelace-css - A collection of professionally designed, every day UI components built on Web standards. SHOELACE IS BECOMING WEB AWESOME. WE ARE LIVE ON KICKSTARTER! 👇👇👇