jsx
redux-toolkit
jsx | redux-toolkit | |
---|---|---|
14 | 287 | |
1,945 | 10,405 | |
0.2% | 0.6% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
5 months ago | 5 days ago | |
HTML | TypeScript | |
- | 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.
jsx
-
I am having to pass down 8+ props even for simple components. What are some common ways to mitigate this? (Typescript)
Svelte syntax? Yes, there is upcoming initiative JSX 2.0 which includes shorthands like that. However, have no idea whether it will be released any time soon. So let's say "this is part of React/JSX 1.0" (shrugging)
-
Why TypeScript is the better JavaScript
Inherent support for JSX in the language itself
-
Node.js やReact、ESM、Viteの説明
JavaScript + HTML(DOM)= JSX
-
Alpine.js
FWIW, the className prop is a React thing not a JSX thing. Other libraries which use JSX will happily accept a plain class prop. The React limitation is abstraction leakage: props are not attributes, they map to DOM properties.
But to the point that JSX is a DSL, that limitation is specifically because React itself is very tightly coupled to DOM semantics… but JSX explicitly has no built in semantics[1].
1: First sentence of https://facebook.github.io/jsx/ - “JSX is an XML-like syntax extension to ECMAScript without any defined semantics.”
-
React - Introducing JSX
JSX stands for 'JavaScript XML' and is a syntax extension for JavaScript. It is used to create DOM elements that are then rendered in the React DOM. Although it looks like HTML, it is actually an XML-like syntax specifically written for use in React. Interestingly, JSX is not valid JavaScript either. JSX needs to be compiled by a tool like Babel to be translated into regular JavaScript that a browser can understand. Put simply, JSX describes what the UI should look like, and React takes care of properly rendering it.
- Web lagnunages to learn
-
My thoughts on Mithril.js
Alternatively, you can use JSX syntax (like with React), but then you need build-tools.
-
Incrementally adopting TypeScript in a create-react-app project
Note: For React component files (JSX) we'll use .tsx to maintain JSX support and for non React files we'll use the .ts file extension. However, if you want you could still use .ts file extension for React components without any problem.
-
Sciter, the 5 MB Electron alternative, has switched to JavaScript
I’m concerned that you’re falling into the same trap here with integrating your own variant of JSX, and mulling over adding more things like hyphens in unquoted object literal keys.
JSX is popular enough that it’s safe, ECMAScript isn’t going to break it, but your alterations to JSX are already significantly incompatible: you have being equivalent to JSX("input", {"class": "search"}, null), but the JSX everyone else is using has that equivalent to JSX(input.search, {}, null). I’m not certain if your JSX syntax is supposed to be able to be used with React code or anything else that uses JSX syntax, but if yes then it’ll be broken in a significant number of cases so that it’s worse than useless, and if no, well, it’s going to be misleading, and what if JSX did get merged into ECMAScript in some form? Then you’d be incompatible with ECMAScript again.
Same deal with hyphens in unquoted object literal keys: it’s not part of ECMAScript now, but just because it’d be a syntax error now doesn’t mean it always will be. Decorators in TypeScript are a good example of things going badly wrong even when an extremely popular project is involved.
I say: if you want to go JavaScript, go JavaScript, maaaaaybe plus standard JSX conforming with <https://facebook.github.io/jsx/>, and no further. Even if what you do is obviously superior, &c. &c. I’d apply the same reasoning on your fork of CSS: you introduced it for a good reason back then, but now it’s just friction, even if it’s a little better in a vacuum (and maybe it is in parts, maybe it isn’t in other parts).
-
Do you think HTML is a programming language
Then it might be time for a pull request which identifies these parts as JSX.
redux-toolkit
-
Copilot: Weapon For Laid Back Developers
In my example I am using Redux Toolkit and I got a prompt for actions to login and logout the user. If I need more functions, I can simply start typing the name, and Copilot provides the completion. For instance, in the example, I'm adding a function to update the user. And of course at the end of the file it suggests the exports.
-
Streamlining State Management with Redux Toolkit
Check out the official documentation.
-
Next.js Weekly #34: StyleX, Self-Healing URLs, AuthKit, Scaleable TailwindCSS, Layouts vs Templates, Faster Next.js Websites [👇 all links in the comments]
Redux Toolkit 2.0
-
This Month in React Nov 2023 – Redux Toolkit 2.0, Kent v Lee, Prettier bounty
Redux Toolkit 2.0 is almost here! Hopefully shipping by this weekend :) Migration page
- Redux Toolkit 2.0: new features, faster perf, smaller bundle sizes (plus major versions for all Redux family packages!)
-
Redux Toolkit 2.0: new features, faster perf, smaller bundle sizes, and more
I am _thrilled_ to announce that:
Redux Toolkit 2.0 is LIVE!!!
- https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-toolkit/releases/tag/v2.0.0
This major version has new features, faster perf, smaller bundle size, and removes deprecated options.
It's accompanied by majors for all our Redux family packages
## RTK 2.0:
- a new `combineSlices` method for lazy-loading reducers - Updates to `createSlice` to include a `selectors` field and allow defining thunks inside
- Immer 10 w/ faster updates
- Removal of deprecated options
See the migration guide:
- https://redux.js.org/usage/migrations/migrating-rtk-2
All of the Redux libraries now have modernized packaging with full ESM/CJS compat. They also ship modern JS (no transpiling for IE11), which means smaller bundle sizes.
We've also done byte-shaving work to shrink the bundles (extracting error messages, de-duping imports)
## Redux core 5.0:
- The TS conversion we did in 2019!
- Action types _must_ be strings
- `UnknownAction` as the default action type
- Better preloaded state types
- Internal subscription improvements
- Still marks `createStore` as deprecated!
- https://github.com/reduxjs/redux/releases/tag/v5.0.0
## React-Redux 9.0:
- *Now requires React 18 and RTK 2.0 / Redux 5.0*
-
Blogged Answers: My Experience Modernizing Packages to ESM
Oh hey, that's my post!
(yes I spend too much time refreshing HN :) )
FWIW I did end up with a packaging combination that seems to work sufficiently. I never did fix the "FalseCJS" issue that `are-the-types-wrong` is detecting. I played with double-emitting TS typedefs, and the `tsup` tool _does_ actually have support for that now (added by Andrew Branch from the TS team). So it might be more feasible now. But ultimately I decided I was tired of messing with packaging setup and that what I've got is good enough. (hopefully)
We're actually about to launch Redux Toolkit 2.0 and Redux 5.0 this week, assuming the last couple pieces come together. Here's the latest RCs - you can see the current `package.json` files in there:
- https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-toolkit/releases/tag/v2.0.0...
- https://github.com/reduxjs/redux/releases/tag/v5.0.0-rc.1
-
Setting up Redux Persist with Redux Toolkit in React JS
However, Redux, or pure Redux to be specific, can be quite verbose and boilerplate-heavy. It requires a significantly lengthy setup, which is where Redux Toolkit comes in handy, offering a simplified and more efficient way to set up and manage state in your React applications.
-
44 React Frontend Interview Questions
State manager is a tool or library that helps manage the state of an application. It provides a centralized store or container for storing and managing data that can be accessed and updated by different components in the application. A state manager solves several problems. Firstly, it is a good practice to separate data and the logic related to it from components. Secondly, when using local state and passing it between components, the code can become convoluted due to the potential for deep nesting of components. By having a global store, we can access and modify data from any component. Alongside React Context, Redux or MobX are commonly used as state management libraries. Learn more Learn more
What are some alternatives?
htm - Hyperscript Tagged Markup: JSX alternative using standard tagged templates, with compiler support.
redux-saga - An alternative side effect model for Redux apps
React - The library for web and native user interfaces.
zustand - 🐻 Bear necessities for state management in React
joystick - A full-stack JavaScript framework for building stable, easy-to-maintain apps and websites.
redux-thunk - Thunk middleware for Redux
denoflare - Develop, test, and deploy Cloudflare Workers with Deno.
next-redux-wrapper - Redux wrapper for Next.js
prepack - A JavaScript bundle optimizer.
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
react-query - 🤖 Powerful asynchronous state management, server-state utilities and data fetching for TS/JS, React, Solid, Svelte and Vue. [Moved to: https://github.com/TanStack/query]