esm-hmr
Fable.Lit
esm-hmr | Fable.Lit | |
---|---|---|
1 | 9 | |
406 | 83 | |
1.7% | - | |
2.6 | 0.0 | |
almost 2 years ago | about 1 year ago | |
TypeScript | F# | |
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.
esm-hmr
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Building a Webpack alternative in F#
This is the golden apple I'm not entirely sure how to tackle... There's an HMR spec that I will follow for that since that's what snowpack/vite's HMR is based on, libraries like Fable.Lit, or Elmish.HMR are working towards being compatible with vite's HMR, so if Perla can make it work like them, then we won't even need to write any specific code for Perla.
Fable.Lit
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How do I understand the build system in modern F# web projects?
The other major frameworks I use are tailwindcss for styling and Fable.Lit for the views.
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What do people use for REST APIs and Web Development now?
Lit for Lit components.
- [Presentation] Fable.Lit
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F(#)ront-end Experience like Re-Frame (clojure(script))?
The Feliz DSL https://zaid-ajaj.github.io/Feliz/ looks fairly similar to Reagent or there's Fable.Lit https://fable.io/Fable.Lit/ which is more like jsx in that you write the html directly, adding active components via interpolated string mechanisms. There is a VS Code add in that gives you html+css syntax highlighting and auto complete inside your F# files.
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Exploring The F# Frontend Landscape
This is my personal favorite one when it comes to Fable options, Fable.Lit builds on top of lit.dev which is a web component library built on web standards. It brings performant straightforward and inter-framework compatible components to the F# FE landscape since Lit works with DOM elements themselves rather than abstractions you can manipulate component instances like if you were doing vanilla JavaScript except that you can use the F# safety for that.
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Building a Webpack alternative in F#
Around September vite got traction with the vue user base and other users as well. I also studied a bit the vite source code, and even used it for some Fable material for posts. I was trying to make some awareness of Fable.Lit support for Web Components and I wanted to experiment in reality how good vite was, and boi it's awesome If you're starting new projects that depend on node tooling in my opinion, it's your best bet.
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Fable is a compiler that brings F# into the JavaScript ecosystem
I don't know a ton about Fable, but they recently wrapped Google's Lit to allow building functional templating and web components in it: https://fable.io/Fable.Lit/
Seems like a neat project.
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Creating Web Components with Fable.Lit
Try Lit.Fable today!
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Using lit-html with F#
Check the fable.lit github repository to see also ways to interact with inter-operate Lit + React within Fable!
What are some alternatives?
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web
Feliz - A fresh retake of the React API in Fable and a collection of high-quality components to build React applications in F#, optimized for happiness
Perla - A cross-platform tool for unbundled front-end development that doesn't depend on Node or requires you to install a complex toolchain
fast - The adaptive interface system for modern web experiences.
parcel - The zero configuration build tool for the web. 📦🚀
Fable: F# |> BABEL - F# to JavaScript, TypeScript, Python, Rust and Dart Compiler
import-maps - How to control the behavior of JavaScript imports
React - The library for web and native user interfaces.
Saturn - Opinionated, web development framework for F# which implements the server-side, functional MVC pattern
fable-react - Fable bindings and helpers for React and React Native