migrate
stitches
migrate | stitches | |
---|---|---|
5 | 80 | |
705 | 7,691 | |
2.0% | 0.2% | |
8.6 | 3.9 | |
16 days ago | 4 months ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
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.
migrate
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Ask HN: If you were to build a web app today what tech stack would you choose?
- Migration powered by graphile-migrate (https://github.com/graphile/migrate)
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Intro to PostGraphile V5 (Part 2): Plugins and Presets
Having now built V5's unified plugins and presets system, I'm extremely pleased with it! I'm so happy, in fact, that I'm looking forward to integrating it with Graphile's other tools such as Graphile Worker (our Postgres-backed job queue) and Graphile Migrate (a lightweight SQL-based migration framework that focuses on DX) once V5 is out and stable.
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How do you manage database structure changes? And deploying code?
I’d highly recommend you use Postgres for the DB and https://github.com/graphile/migrate for the DB migration tool.
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What is your development stack for 2023?
graphile-migrate - Opinionated SQL-powered productive roll-forward migration tool for PostgreSQL
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Step by Step OAuth 2.0 Social Login Passport.js?
For version control I use flyway but am considering just dropping it because idk if I will ever need to rollback. Most likely would switch to this if so: https://github.com/graphile/migrate
stitches
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Styling React 2023 edition
Over the past few years, I've worked with React apps utilising various CSS-in-JS libraries, starting with styled-components, transitioning through emotion, Theme UI, and finally Stitches. I've also integrated MUI, Mantine, and Chakra in numerous client projects.
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HyperUI: Free Open Source Tailwind CSS Components
Radix has some great ideas that challenge the way components are usually built. I'd love to use it, but am somewhat burned by how Stitches stopped being maintained due to the changes in React 18. Context: https://github.com/stitchesjs/stitches/discussions/1149#disc...
To be clear, it's not so much that they decided to not spend time, energy and money into maintaining it, but that there's seemingly been very little (if any) interest in letting others maintain it despite several people expressing interest. I'm sure it's scare handing over commit access, but if you're giving it up anyway then why not just do it, see what happens? Instead it's just dead in the water.
I'd happily pay license fees to use Radix and/or Stitches, if that guarantees maintenance. Sadly that's not an option it seems.
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Why do experienced front-end developers use CSS frameworks?
I work on a lot of more "creative" projects where frameworks like TailwindCSS or Bootstrap just don't cut it. My approach has always been to use some kind of library to ease the process of creating my own CSS framework that can then be used by other people. I find that Stitches does it pretty well. You set your design tokens, then you have IntelliSense to help people understand the design system.
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I created a Zero-Runtime CSS-in-JS Library Compatible with Next.js App Router and RSC
Some libraries, such as Stitches, claim near-zero runtime performance overhead by tackling the first issue (parsing JavaScript CSS objects). Nevertheless, they still inject the parsed CSS into the DOM at runtime, which means they haven’t entirely eliminated the performance concerns.
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what's the best way for styling our components in react?
Stitches allows you to map your design system
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What are ways we can integrate our designers into our React projects?
Define strict system of colors, spaces, etc then attempt to synchronize usage of it in both design and code (tools like https://vanilla-extract.style/ or https://stitches.dev/ can help with enforcing system on software side)
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What would be your styling library of choice if you were starting a new project?
Curious to understand what is trending. We've been big fans of Stitches, however, unfortunately the project is no longer maintained.
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Introducing DecaUI
There are some issues with SSR and NextJS in React 18: https://github.com/stitchesjs/stitches/issues/863
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Getting started with NextUI and Next.js
According to the docs, NextUI is a React UI library that allows you to make beautiful, modern, and fast websites/applications regardless of your design experience. It is created with React and Stitches, based on React Aria, and inspired by Vuesax.
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Top 3 React UI Libraries in 2023
Stitches CSS customization
What are some alternatives?
fpc_wasm - Free Pascal to WASM demos
vanilla-extract - Zero-runtime Stylesheets-in-TypeScript
Phinx - PHP Database Migrations for Everyone
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
yew - Rust / Wasm framework for creating reliable and efficient web applications
chakra-ui - ⚡️ Simple, Modular & Accessible UI Components for your React Applications
Material UI - Ready-to-use foundational React components, free forever. It includes Material UI, which implements Google's Material Design.
bytebase.com - Source for bytebase.com
tailwind - 🔥 A schematic that adds Tailwind CSS to Angular applications
lib - Internationalization library built for SvelteKit.
styled-system - ⬢ Style props for rapid UI development