madge
animxyz
madge | animxyz | |
---|---|---|
8 | 22 | |
8,535 | 2,380 | |
- | 0.8% | |
6.3 | 0.0 | |
18 days ago | 8 months ago | |
JavaScript | SCSS | |
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.
madge
- Madge: Create graphs from your CommonJS, AMD or ES6 module dependencies
-
Visualisation tool
something like https://github.com/sverweij/dependency-cruiser maybe https://github.com/pahen/madge or https://github.com/antoine-coulon/skott
-
Thoughts on Svelte
You can render dependency graphs with Madge [0] (works with both TS and JS).
[0] https://github.com/pahen/madge
-
Would anyone find a visual representation of their React component tree like this be helpful?
It would be interesting to somehow overlay this graph on top of the typescript import graph (generated by something like madge). I suspect it might highlight some poorly organized regions of the codebase, because it would be obvious which component trees depend on multiple clusters of files.
- Tools to visualize the dependency graph between files of a github repo?
-
Set your project up for success
So far, I've always used a tool called madge, which saved my ass countless times.
-
ts-helper - Fast dependency cycle checker
I've also noticed that eslint cycle checking is slow for large projects, we currently use madge (https://github.com/pahen/madge) for cycle checking and its very fast and is working pretty well.
-
Is it possible to generate a flow diagram from Javascript code?
There's no VS Code extension for it AFAIK, but it's the best (and almost only) tool that I know which can do it for JavaScript code. There's also madge and emerge, in case the first one doesn't fit your needs.
animxyz
-
What is your preferred method to use animation?
I don't use a lot of animations, if it's simple stuff I'll just do it myself. Have used animate.css before, it was quite nice, especially paired with wow.js. Have been meaning to try AnimXYZ but again, don't use a lot of animations so haven't been able to yet.
-
Thoughts on Svelte
Vue handles it just fine with doing the hard work behind the scenes and just passing you some CSS classes to connect your animations to (and there are JS events to use as well if you need a JS animation). Main difference is Svelte gets the benefit of being able to do some fancier stuff like items changing order or doing more than just entering/exiting. Vue has this as well, but not as easy to use.
That being said I overall prefer the Vue CSS approach to animation, it inspired my brother and I to make https://animxyz.com which has been my most successful side project yet. We wanted to make it work for Svelte as well but they don't have the CSS classes so we can't hook into their events the same.
-
How to make website like this?
GSAP seems like overkill, these are simple css animations, animXYZ could do the heavy stuff for you but it shouldn't take that long to learn.
-
Top 10 CSS Animation Libraries
Documentation | GitHub
-
Integrating touch (iPhone/Tablet)?
Slightly off topic, but I'd also recommend checking out AnimXYZ and has Vue-specific support.
-
The Ultimate List of CSS Code Generators For Web Development
Animxyz A tool that helps you create, customize, and compose animations powered by CSS variables without custom keyframes.
-
Animate a React app with AnimXYZ
Adding animations to a web app can be a challenging task, so itβs natural to reach for a library to make it easier. AnimXYZ, a composable CSS animation toolkit, allows you to compose complex animations by combining simple utility classes.
-
7 Helpful tools for frontend devs π€―
AnimXYZ
-
Project Skill Tree: Tech Stack
Animxyz for Animations and Transitions
-
Smooth slide animations
Have used animate.css in the past, was very nice and easy to work with. Animista and animXYZ seems cool too.
What are some alternatives?
vue-component-analyzer - Analyze dependency tree for Vue.js SFC (Single File Component)
dnd-kit - The modern, lightweight, performant, accessible and extensible drag & drop toolkit for React.
eslint-plugin-import - ESLint plugin with rules that help validate proper imports.
tailwind-starter - this is my gulp starter template for tailwind that implements rtl support, jit mode, tree-shaking, dart-sass mixins and functions, es6 helper functions, and more out of the box
dependency-cruiser - Validate and visualize dependencies. Your rules. JavaScript, TypeScript, CoffeeScript. ES6, CommonJS, AMD.
framer/motion - Open source, production-ready animation and gesture library for React
parcel - The zero configuration build tool for the web. π¦π
cssplus - Fast nested CSS rule expander in JavaScript
stylelint - A mighty CSS linter that helps you avoid errors and enforce conventions.
uiGradients - π΄ Beautiful colour gradients for design and code
style-resources - Style Resources for Nuxt 3
react-beautiful-dnd - Beautiful and accessible drag and drop for lists with React