umbrella
uswds
umbrella | uswds | |
---|---|---|
7 | 78 | |
2,250 | 6,642 | |
- | 0.5% | |
2.0 | 9.7 | |
15 days ago | 3 days ago | |
JavaScript | SCSS | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
umbrella
- Ask HN: Good resource on writing web app with plain JavaScript/HTML/CSS
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The impact of removing jQuery on our web performance
If you are mainly using jquery for its DOM manipulation¹ rather than for browser compatibility² or things that didn't exist consistently in older browsers³ then there are much smaller libraries that do that job which may be worth looking into. https://github.com/fabiospampinato/cash or https://github.com/franciscop/umbrella to give a couple of examples. Some explicitly support IE11 so you are not dropping as much support for legacy browsers as you might otherwise.
Though if jQuery works for you and isn't a performance issue, then by all means keep with it. It may not be ideal, but good enough and does the job. Let the naysayers spend their time debating whether you should or not, and just get on with making things!
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[1] selection engine, chained selections, chained modifications, …
[2] not the issue it once was, if you can abandon IE and old Android browsers from your supported UAs or can deal with any issues that crop up individually
[3] again, if you can afford to drop support for legacy UAs
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Gov.uk drops jQuery from their front end
Yes, and if you continue long enough you end up with one of the many jQuery alternatives, like mine:
https://umbrellajs.com/
- Umbrella JavaScript: Tiny library for DOM manipulation and events
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Ask HN: Should I even bother with React?
If you're learning React just to get a job, you're doing it wrong, since recruiters are always changing their requirements. They will add `proficient in Svelte` just to annoy you, (after having learning React) and now you're no longer relevant to them.
That's why I say: stick to the baseline of HTML, CSS, & JS. Learn to write vanilla JS for common things, maybe learn UmbrellaJS[0] for syntactic sugar and manipulating the DOM.
Oh and learn some APIs to do back-end stuff too. And for forms, there's loads of projects out there to automate that[1]
[0] https://umbrellajs.com/
[1] https://www.producthunt.com/search?q=forms
- Make Front End Shit Again
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Replacing jQuery (110kb) With UmbrellaJS (8kb)
const insertAfter = (col, html) => col.forEach(el => el.insertAdjacentElement('afterend', html));
Keep going a bit like that, until you realize you are basically reinventing jQuery. Add a couple of very nice-to-haves, like chaining (instead of nesting in these examples above) and that's exactly what Umbrella JS is, very thin methods to manipulate the DOM and handle events. In fact, compare our "addClass" implementation in this comment to [Umbrella's addClass](https://github.com/franciscop/umbrella/blob/master/src/plugi...), it's almost the same size but hundred times more flexible:
// Add class(es) to the matched nodes
uswds
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Firefox on the brink?
Now and then I stumble upon the USWDS (the article mentions it) and am surprised how good that thing actually is.
- AI.gov
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A design system for the federal government
I would like to note that there currently is no centralized Design System for the Dutch Government, unfortunately. All agencies are creating their own Design System based on the Rijkshuisstijl.
Currently I'm working on ROOS (https://rvo.nl/roos) which is the Design System for the Netherlands Enterprise Agency. This is build with the already mentioned NL Design System. My hope being that this will bring the different agencies together and start working on a centralized Design System for the Dutch Government and follow the excellent examples of https://design-system.service.gov.uk and https://designsystem.digital.gov/
- Why most Indian apps/sites have bad UX?
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Github examples of full, real world scss files
I learnt a lot of Sass patterns from using the US Web Design System.
- Best UI framework for accessibility and 508 compliance
- Zero Skill to Website in a Month
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Let's talk about the truth
USWDS: https://designsystem.digital.gov/
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Visual design rules you can safely follow every time
FYI I recommend following U.S. gov't standards: https://designsystem.digital.gov/documentation/developers/
Dark/light mode is fine and all, however be wary of accessibility. Note that the US actually even publishes it's own CSS/JS framework similar to bootstrap. I believe (but I am not positive) it is here: https://designsystem.digital.gov/
I don't claim it to be perfect, but the last time I had the opportunity to use it, it put other UI/UX frameworks to shame.
- Does US gov hire UX?
What are some alternatives?
cash - An absurdly small jQuery alternative for modern browsers.
Next.js - The React Framework
femtoJS - femtoJS - Really small JavaScript (ES6) library for DOM manipulation.
wp-calypso - The JavaScript and API powered WordPress.com
Alpine.js - A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.
design-system - Priceline.com Design System
govuk-puppet - Decommissioned: Puppet manifests that used to provision the legacy GOV.UK stack.
react-uswds - USWDS 3.0 components built in React
DOM_Maker - JavaScript library for creating DOM structures in the browser.
nl-covid19-data-dashboard - The dashboard provides information on the outbreak and prevalence of COVID-19 in The Netherlands
playbook - The Digital Services Playbook