million
lexical
Our great sponsors
million | lexical | |
---|---|---|
48 | 56 | |
15,163 | 17,225 | |
4.9% | 2.1% | |
9.7 | 9.6 | |
6 days ago | 6 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
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.
million
-
Show HN: Million Lint – ESLint for Performance
Hey HN! Founder of Million – We’re building a tool to that helps fix slow React code. Here is a quick demo: https://youtu.be/k-5jWgpRqlQ
Fixing web performance issues is hard. Every developer knows this experience: we insert console.log everywhere, catch some promising leads, but nothing happens before "time runs out." Eventually, the slow/buggy code never gets fixed, problems pile up on a backlog, and our end users are hurt.
We started Million to fix this. A VSCode extension that identifies slow code and suggests fixes (like ESLint, for performance!) The website is here: https://million.dev/blog/lint
I realized this was a problem when I tried to write an optimizing compiler for React in high school (src: https://github.com/aidenybai/million). It garnered a lot of interest (14K+ stars) and usage, but it didn't solve all user problems.
Traditionally, devtools either hinge on full static analysis OR runtime profiling. We found success in a mixture of the two with dynamic analysis. During compilation, we inject instrumentation where it's necessary. Here is an example:
function App({ start }) {
-
Million 3.0: All You Need To Know
To be honest, it fills me with great joy to finally be able to witness the launch of the 3.0.0 major release of Million.js; this is something that has been talked about since maybe July 2023, but, Aiden Bai finally assembled a team to get it out there and just last week on the day 2 February as at 8:00 am PST (Pacific Standard Time) Million v3 was released!!
-
React Jam just started, making a game in 13 days with React
>> React is not traditionally used for making games, but that's part of the fun and the challenge. R
> MS Flight Simulator cockpits are built with MSFS Avionics Framework which is React-like and MIT licensed:
https://github.com/microsoft/msfs-avionics-mirror/tree/main/...
preactjs may or may not be faster: https://preactjs.com/
Million.js is faster than preact, and lists a number of references under Acknowledgements: https://github.com/aidenybai/million#acknowledgments
https://million.dev/docs :
> We use a novel approach to the virtual DOM called the block virtual DOM. You can read more on what the block virtual DOM is with Virtual DOM: Back in Block and how we make it happen in React with Behind the block().*
React API reference > Components > Profiler:
-
My Journey to Accelerate Load Times in Heavy Frontend
Consider replacing the default virtual DOM with an alternative solution. For instance, Million.js
-
Welcome to the dark side. Ree.js awaits you!
@aidenybai 's Millionjs
-
Show HN: I made a tool that makes React faster automatically
In brief: I'm Aiden, 18, and have spent the past 2 years of high school working on Million.js, an open source React alternative with 11K stars on GitHub and hundreds of thousands of npm downloads.
Recently, I released automatic mode, which detects slow React components and automatically optimizes the reconciliation phase. It's still in beta but chugging along. It's around 70% faster than React on the JS Framework Benchmark and you can see how I did it here: https://million.dev/blog/virtual-dom
Interested? Check it out here: https://million.dev
-
What are your thoughts on Preact Signals? I've thoroughly enjoyed it but am now thinking of dropping it because it results in a fat stack of issues in the Next 13 server logs and because Dan Abramov himself advised against it. Nothing's broken, but it doesn't feel like it makes sense to use anymore
Either that or add signals to the library itself. I don't get why it isn't in there when a ton of React's competitors are either using signal-like behavior or forgoing the clearly-obsolete way React handles its VDOM. When a high schooler can create something to make the library faster, you know that the core team is either prioritizing the wrong things or someone managing React is too prideful to admit that a lot of what worked a decade ago doesn't work today.
- Million – Fast and lightweight virtual DOM that makes React up to 70% faster
-
Introducing Million.js - A Lightning-fast Virtual DOM for React!
Reference: https://million.dev/
- React Up to 70% Faster
lexical
-
Quill – Your powerful rich text editor
I remember using https://github.com/facebook/lexical for a project a year ago and mostly things worked our of the box.
Any reason to prefer quill?
-
Wax: The Word Processor for the Web
Lexical (https://lexical.dev/) is really nice to use and doesn't use Prosemirror or CKEditor.
- Ask HN: What is your favorite FOSS WYSIWYG editor?
-
Has anyone had much experience using Lexical (by Meta) recently?
I've tried to get to grips with Lexical but found the docs pretty hard to follow. It definitely seems to offer pretty heaps of power, just unlocking that seemed tricky. We're hoping to use it for customer facing collaborative list product that allows for richer media (video, code blocks etc.)
-
MDX Editor - a Rich Text Markdown Editor React Component
Yes, it uses the Lexical framework internally, so markdown gets converted to an AST, then the AST gets serialized back.
-
On Google Docs and why rich text editors need custom layout engines
Rich text editing doesn't imply pagination. Contenteditable is not abandoned. Lexical[1], Meta's framework for text editing relies on contenteditables.
[1]: https://lexical.dev/
-
In what text format do apps like twitter and instagram store their tweets and bios?
lexical is a framework for building web based text-editors ... so yea it can do formatting but if you are using it to just do formatting you are very much using the wrong tool.
- Add components within the textarea
-
Best Text Editor to integrate with React?
Haven't tried it out myself, but it's probably Lexical.
-
New Svelte Core/Vercel Team Member
Svelte just got a lot more interesting! Dominic who is the creator of LexicalJs and InfernoJs (which is known to be insanely fast) has joined the svelte core team and is now working at Vercel full time! Here is the announcement on Twitter!
What are some alternatives?
Vue.js - This is the repo for Vue 2. For Vue 3, go to https://github.com/vuejs/core
tiptap - The headless rich text editor framework for web artisans.
Alpine.js - A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.
slate - A completely customizable framework for building rich text editors. (Currently in beta.)
html2canvas - Screenshots with JavaScript
Draft.js - A React framework for building text editors.
React - The library for web and native user interfaces.
quill - Quill is a modern WYSIWYG editor built for compatibility and extensibility.
Rete.js - Rete.js is a framework for creating visual interfaces and workflows. It provides out-of-the-box solutions for visualization using various libraries and frameworks, as well as solutions for processing graphs based on dataflow and control flow approaches.
Monaco Editor - A browser based code editor
snabbdom - A virtual DOM library with focus on simplicity, modularity, powerful features and performance.
ProseMirror - The ProseMirror WYSIWYM editor