html-form-to-google-sheet
open-props
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html-form-to-google-sheet | open-props | |
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5 | 49 | |
677 | 4,402 | |
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0.0 | 8.4 | |
over 1 year ago | 4 days ago | |
JavaScript | HTML | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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html-form-to-google-sheet
- Self-hosting forms, the sane way
- Ways of sending HTML form to spreadsheet
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Ways to send HTML form data to a spreadsheet
This guide is current and works well. https://github.com/levinunnink/html-form-to-google-sheet
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Ask HN: Good resource on writing web app with plain JavaScript/HTML/CSS
Modern web is fairly complex but it doesn't have to be. What you're after is a simple form to submit that data to someplace. CSS and JavaScript in your case are only needed to improve the look and get some kind of dynamic feedback.
So you have the client webpage, this can be a really simple webpage without any style that just has several form tags (Reference: https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_form.asp).
Then you need to send this data to some place. You can use standard html actions to do this to a back end script, a rest api, or even to a formatted email that will be sent via the user's email client.
You may need node to code the back end if there isn't one you can use. You can also use google sheets. See example here: https://github.com/levinunnink/html-form-to-google-sheet. This is really only useful for a small prototype so at some point you would need to standup your own backend somewhere. That gets more complicated because now you need a script (could be JavaScript & node for example or PHP or anything else) which processes your form request and stores it to a database someplace else.
Good luck and happy coding.
- Send HTML forms to Google Sheets (2021 version)
open-props
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Learn CSS Layout the Pedantic Way
There's still some boilerplate, but I'm a big fan of Open Props[0] because it takes a hybrid approach. CSS isn't necessarily reinventing the wheel, but allowing for easier / more powerful approaches to difficult layouts or things that would otherwise require JS. Bootstrap is fine but troubleshooting advanced layout issues involves a lot of inspecting elements to see what styles are actually being applied (at least in my experience, YMMV) so I'd personally always bet on CSS.
[0] https://open-props.style/
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Why Tailwind Isn't for Me
I don't quite get the hate for having CSS in another file. Do you also put all your react stuff in one single file ? That same logic and argument can be applied against all modularization.
And really 20-50 tailwind classes in a single element is VERY hard to read and keep in mind. No - it does not make things clear or understandable. One tends to need to re-read and scan over from the beginning and eyes glaze over. Esp if some elements only vary with a few classes missing. I guess it works for people with very high attention to detail and high amount of working memory. I only find it personally frustrating.
Maybe tailwind css works for some bright people. I did try it for a couple of projects and only felt pain.
However, the "atomic css" philosophy behind tailwind is great. I find framewroks like https://open-props.style/ far better to use.
- Htmx and Web Components: A Perfect Match
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Styling React 2023 edition
Open Props adds to the set by providing extra custom properties for things like easing functions or animations.
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The Future of CSS: Easy Light-Dark Mode Color Switching with Light-Dark()
> If you wanted to actually solve theming, what you should work for is not a constrained helper function like light-dark(), but instead a shared token schema. Today nearly every company has their own token schema and different ways of naming things in the semantic token layer. If we had a shard language here, not only would it be trivial to add light/dark theming (just redefine a few variables that are already provided for you), code could be shared between sites and inherit the theming/branding.
Isn't that the idea behind https://open-props.style/ (and https://theme-ui.com/ in JS land)?
I think it's a great idea, but hampered by the lack of adoption incentives for the very people that need to adopt it for it to become successful (design system/component library authors). It introduces constraints, but the promised interoperability is not really beneficial to the people who need to work within those constraints.
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Tailwind CSS and the death of web craftsmanship
I do think that the real value of Tailwind comes from the utility classes, rather than css-in-html paradigm. You could achieve the same, for example, with Pollen.css [0] or Open Props [1].
[0] https://github.com/heybokeh/pollen
[1] https://github.com/argyleink/open-props
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What is the best styling strategy for a Svelte project?
If you choose to style with plain CSS you can add design tokens as CSS variables with Open Props: https://open-props.style.
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Released tw-variables: 400 useful Tailwind utilities as ready-to-import CSS variables
Some time ago I discovered Open Props which provides a lot of design tokens as CSS variables and started using it in some of my projects.
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[Showcase] Searching for Friendly-User for Scrum-Tool Miyagi
CSS: Open Props (https://open-props.style/)
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What UI framework would you recommend?
https://open-props.style/ gives you design tokens as CSS variables. Itβs CSS only and not Svelte specific.
What are some alternatives?
web_app_from_scratch - One script for every web framework which sets up a minimal web app with routing, templates and users.
carbon-components-svelte - Svelte implementation of the Carbon Design System
longwood - Experimental rendering library
svelte-headlessui - Unofficial Svelte port of the Headless UI component library
uibuilder - Typed HTML templates using TypeScript's TSX files
pollen - The CSS variables build system
javascript-todo-list-tutorial - β A step-by-step complete beginner example/tutorial for building a Todo List App (TodoMVC) from scratch in JavaScript following Test Driven Development (TDD) best practice. π±
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
Web-Dev-For-Beginners - 24 Lessons, 12 Weeks, Get Started as a Web Developer
modern-normalize - π Normalize browsers' default style
eureka - Lucene-based search engine for your source code
vanilla-extract - Zero-runtime Stylesheets-in-TypeScript