loadable-components
usehooks-ts
loadable-components | usehooks-ts | |
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12 | 19 | |
7,536 | 5,651 | |
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5.4 | 9.3 | |
12 days ago | 11 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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loadable-components
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5 Basic Tips Everyone Should Know for Optimizing React Performance 🚀
Lost of people would use the typical React method with the await import('') method, but I recommend you use a module called loadable-components.
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5 Small and Hidden React libraries you should already be using
And the best thing. It is really easy to use. Almost plug-and-play. So, give it a try! https://github.com/gregberge/loadable-components
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How do I display the loader while the .svg document is loading?
I would like to display small loader in the component while the .svg document is loading. How can i do that? I tried to use Loadable Components - React code splitting and set fallback to the .svg component, but it doesn't work. I would like the loader to display until the entire .svg file has rendered in the DOM. What should I use to achieve this effect? In pure JavaScript, you can set the listener until the svg is rendered in the DOM.
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How to use client-side only packages with SSR in Gatsby and Next.js
The library @loadable/component allows you to dynamically import components to your project, so they don't get rendered on the server. The following component uses leaflet, a library similar to google maps that only supports client-side rendering:
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Getting error "Path" argument must be string while deploying React - Loadable components sample code in cloud functions
{ "hosting": { "public": "public", "ignore": [ "firebase.json", "**/.*", "**/node_modules/**" ], "rewrites": [ { "source": "**", "function": "supercharged" } ] }} These all are the changes I made from the the loadable-components server side rendering async node example
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How to choose a third party package
It's very important that you are choosing an active project instead of a dead/unmaintained project. An active project improves over time through community feedback. An unmaintained project does not move forward, fix functional bugs or patch security issues. Sometimes, a very popular package can be abandoned and go into a "frozen" state with many open issues and pull requests. It might have been a great solution in the past, but this is a sign that we have to move on. An example is react-loadable. It was a great solution for a very long time for code-splitting in React. I totally loved it. But it's stale now with many issues and PRs since 2018 (this post is written at the end of 2021). Now, if I need to split code in React, I use loadable-components, which is in active development, becoming more popular, patches bugs reported by the community, and most importantly, solves my problems. My personal advice: choose a package that's active in the last 3-6 months, with issues that are being resolved and PRs that are being merged.
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What are some issues with using React/Redux?
Now client side rendering is very powerful and as I said in the first comment I'm two years in production of an app that's using things like lazy loading and client side routing and more to give the app a more regular application feel, but by using next.js to generate a static site my users would have benefited by not having to generate all the javascript their using on their own pcs.
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Navigation in React App using React Router (v6)
When we have lot of pages in out application, we will end up having lot of code. We don't want our user to download all the code when they just load the home page. In order to package code of different routes to separate chunks, along with react router we can make use of loadable components, which takes advantage of dynamic imports.
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Frontend Performance Optimization with Code Splitting using React.Lazy & Suspense 🔥
// Components.js export const Component = /* ... */; export const UnusedComponent = /* ... */; // Component.js export { Component as default } from "./Components.js"; As both React.lazy and Suspense are not available for rendering on the server yet now, it is recommended to use https://github.com/gregberge/loadable-components for code-splitting in a server-rendered app (SSR). React.lazy is helpful for rendering dynamic import as a regular component in client-rendered app (CSR). Magic Comment at import() import( /* webpackChunkName: "test", webpackPrefetch: true */ "LoginModal" ) // or import( /* webpackChunkName: "test" */ /* webpackPrefetch: true */ "LoginModal" ) // spacing optional "webpackChunkName" : Using this magic comment we can set name for the js chunk that is loaded on demand.
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Code Splitting in React using React.lazy and Loadable Components
In order to load the CatImage component to a separate bundle, we can make use of loadable components. Let's add @loadable-component to our package:
usehooks-ts
- React hook library, ready to use, written in TypeScript
- Explorando a lib usehooks-ts para Desenvolvimento no React
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rooks VS usehooks-ts - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 1 Sep 2023
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A simple theme switcher in React for Tailwind CSS
These depedencies provide unstyled accessible components from headless ui, icons from heroicons and common hooks with typescript support.
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News IQ - a daily news quiz - built with React, Local Storage, Anonymous Auth, and Framer Motion
🏡 Local Storage - All score history, streaks, and user info is saved in Local Storage! Check out `useLocalStorage` by https://usehooks-ts.com/. A great resource and helpful when you want to quickly manage it like any other state.
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How to TRULY persist component state using a custom hook - useQueryParam
We will store last search query string in local storage, thus I will summon useLocalStorage from usehooks-ts:
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Is it correct to use useRef in my useCurrentSection hook?
There are tons of examples of people building hooks for IntersectionObserver, they are probably a good deal more complex than what you want but you can learn a lot from how they do it and then simplify it to your needs, here is one: https://github.com/juliencrn/usehooks-ts/blob/master/src/useIntersectionObserver/useIntersectionObserver.ts
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React.dev
Take a look at Use hooks libraries for examples of code that you may want to have portability with (this is they typescript one because its the one I've used)
One of the simplest examples is "useToggle" which just sets a state variable to true or false. Not hard to write in a class component but it's still stuff that you may end up writing a lot.
A lot of similar ones are click and event handlers that need to be cleaned up after the component is unmounted.
useIsMounted is one I use a lot too to ensure I'm not trying to write state on an API callback once a component is unmounted.
You could add each of these to a class with an hoc and end up with withToggle(withIsMounted(withUseMediaEvent(MyComponent))) but that tends to be a bit of a mess.
https://usehooks-ts.com/
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5 Great Custom Hooks For Your React Project
This implementation of the useCopyToClipboard hook comes from the usehooks-ts library. It provides an easy way to copy text to the clipboard. Other React hooks libraries also have this hook which they implement differently: some rely on JavaScript libraries like copy-to-clipboard that run on document.execCommand() while others like this one depend on the clipboard API.
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7 great libraries for React
1: usehooks-ts
What are some alternatives?
react-loadable - :hourglass_flowing_sand: A higher order component for loading components with promises.
react-use - React Hooks — 👍
react-router - Declarative routing for React
usehooks.ts - React hook library, ready to use, written in Typescript. [Moved to: https://github.com/juliencrn/usehooks-ts]
react-ssr-example - A simple React server-side rendering example with express and esbuild
react-hooks-library - A collection of hooks and utilities for modern React
react-scroll - React scroll component
usehooks - A collection of modern, server-safe React hooks – from the ui.dev team
react-async-component - Resolve components asynchronously, with support for code splitting and advanced server side rendering use cases.
mui-modal-provider - 🌞 Context API and Hooks based Modal Provider for react material-ui framework
Gatsby - The best React-based framework with performance, scalability and security built in.
react-local-storage - A stateful react hook for browser storage