jsxstyle
emotion
Our great sponsors
jsxstyle | emotion | |
---|---|---|
1 | 52 | |
2,106 | 17,175 | |
0.5% | 0.6% | |
7.6 | 5.9 | |
6 months ago | 22 days ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
jsxstyle
-
Panda CSS: build time and type-safe CSS-in-JS
Works in both React and Preact. It's designed to support generating styles at build time, but I've never bothered. For the sorts of things I work on, being able to quickly bang out a component is more important than golfing the bundle size or maintaining a design system.
jsxstyle feels like I can sculpt in code. It's really satisfying to hammer out some props and see a component come to life, especially when you've got hot module replacement working.
Based on a quick perusal of linked page, Panda seems like perhaps a more mature version of jsxstyle, but also more fidgety. As an army of one, I'm happy to optimize for iteration speed, but if I needed to maintain a system, maybe I'd consider switching to Panda.
https://www.npmjs.com/package/jsxstyle
emotion
-
Creating Nx Workspace with Eslint, Prettier and Husky Configuration
emotion [ https://emotion.sh ]
- Why is does modern HTML/CSS seem so complex and convoluted? (details in comment)
-
How are folks feeling about the React team's push toward server components?
dang, I never thought about this implication, and I googled the emotionjs repo there's a currently-active open issue regarding this https://github.com/emotion-js/emotion/issues/2928
-
I created a Zero-Runtime CSS-in-JS Library Compatible with Next.js App Router and RSC
Over my years of working with React, I’ve loved using CSS-in-JS libraries like Emotion and Styled-components. However, their inherent performance overhead from injecting CSS at runtime and their incompatibility with the latest Next.js features such as App Router and React Server Components (RSC) have always been a nagging issue for me.
-
Next.js App Directory Architecture First Impressions
An early difficulty I encountered was using UI component libraries like Mantine and Material UI in the new architecture. After looking through some GitHub issues, the culprit is Emotion, a package many component libraries rely on that does not support server rendering.
- How are you styling in NextJS?
-
CSS Style Guide for Web Dev?
In general I recommend using styled-components or emotion. These directly attach CSS to your components in a scoped way so that your CSS files aren’t stepping on each other’s toes all the time and make sure styling is colocated with the component.
-
Server Components
I ran into this problem as well. The root cause as I understand it is emotion: https://github.com/emotion-js/emotion/issues/2928
-
CSS In JS - The what, why and How's
While integrating component libraries, they may not give you full control over the order in which styles are inserted. (Example issue).
-
Lets create something neat together!
Vanilla Extract (CSS Framework) (Alternative: Emotion)
What are some alternatives?
CSSX - CSS in JavaScript
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
Aphrodite - Framework-agnostic CSS-in-JS with support for server-side rendering, browser prefixing, and minimum CSS generation
JSS - JSS is an authoring tool for CSS which uses JavaScript as a host language.
styled-components - Visual primitives for the component age. Use the best bits of ES6 and CSS to style your apps without stress 💅
glamor - inline css for react et al
styled-jsx - Full CSS support for JSX without compromises
React Figma - ⚛️ A React renderer for Figma
linaria - Zero-runtime CSS in JS library
ReactCSS - :lipstick: Inline Styles in JS
Sass - Sass makes CSS fun!