player_sorting_frames
jsbundling-rails
player_sorting_frames | jsbundling-rails | |
---|---|---|
2 | 38 | |
10 | 798 | |
- | 1.6% | |
0.0 | 6.9 | |
about 2 years ago | about 1 month ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
- | 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.
player_sorting_frames
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Filter, search, and sort tables with Rails and Turbo Frames
If you want to follow along with this article and you haven’t already completed the sortable table article locally, you’ll want to begin by cloning this Github repo. If you have completed the sortable table article, this one picks up exactly where that one ends, so go ahead and work from where that article finished.
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Sort tables (almost) instantly with Ruby on Rails and Turbo Frames
You can demo the application for yourself on Heroku (the free dyno may need a moment to wake up when you visit it) or view the complete source on Github.
jsbundling-rails
- Rails Merging Support for Bun.sh
- Rails Frontend Bundling - Which one should I choose?
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Is the default importmap method unrealistic in the most popular real world use cases?
I think this is more like a demo - you will not get the same features as jsbundling-rails by only following instructions in the video. For that you will need to change some other files as well. You can find out what files to be added/changed from the install script. The important bits are mostly the same as in the video, but some supplement parts are not mentioned in the video. Some people actually reported in the comment that they can't deploy such app, but I think it depends.
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at my wits' end.. please help me figure out why javascript won't work (Rails 7 with esbuild)
I'm sorry, I didn't see that in your title. Using esbuild is 100% supported by Rails through this gem https://github.com/rails/jsbundling-rails. Have a look at the docs there to make sure that you're setup correctly.
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Configure Stimulus with esbuild and Babel — Rails & Javascript
Rails applications are bundler-agnostic. They do not care how you bundle your javascript code. It just expects whatever comes from the bundler to be placed under app/assets, so the asset pipeline processes it. We can see this in the official jsbundling-rails gem, which consists of scripts to install different bundlers and configure a default npm build command to generate our bundles—no interaction whatsoever with the Rails configuration. This black-box bundler logic allows us to change and update our bundler system without tuning any other aspect of our Rails application.
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foreman: not found
Hello, this is my first time setting up a rails app that also uses react, I am using https://github.com/rails/jsbundling-rails I went with esbuild because I am following this tutorial on setting it up https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yoLJXjEV2nM, however when I run bin/dev in the terminal I get the error bin/dev: 8: exec: foreman: not found
- Ruby 3.2 + Rails 7 + Tailwind + Font Awesome - should be blazing fast, yet tests very slow. 20 requests are being made. How do I make fewer requests, create fewer objects and make this simple app super fast? Production : https pickaxe dot ca. Thank you! -Dan H
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How to bundle assets in a Rails engine
You first install your asset handlers as you need them for your project. They can be anything from rails/jsbundling-rails and rails/tailwindcss-rails to webpacker or something custom.
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Comparing Phoenix to Rails in December 2022
The functionality comes from https://github.com/rails/jsbundling-rails and https://github.com/rails/cssbundling-rails -- both come with Rails 7 and all you have to do is generate your app with the choices you want such as -j esbuild --css tailwind.
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Vercel announces Turbopack, the successor to Webpack
The Rails https://github.com/rails/jsbundling-rails gem lets you pick between esbuild, rollup and Webpack. If Turbopack ends up being popular then jsbundling should be able to support it.
The nice thing about Rails now is there's no direct integration like Webpacker once was. Now we can basically use the JS tool straight up and Rails will just look at assets in a specific directory, it doesn't matter what tool generated it.
What are some alternatives?
cssbundling-rails - Bundle and process CSS in Rails with Tailwind, PostCSS, and Sass via Node.js.
importmap-rails - Use ESM with importmap to manage modern JavaScript in Rails without transpiling or bundling.
turbo-rails - Use Turbo in your Ruby on Rails app
vite_ruby - ⚡️ Vite.js in Ruby, bringing joy to your JavaScript experience
kredis - Higher-level data structures built on Redis
hotwire-rails - Use Hotwire in your Ruby on Rails app
esbuild-live-reload
form-request-submit-polyfill
Webpacker - Use Webpack to manage app-like JavaScript modules in Rails
stimulus_reflex - Build reactive applications with the Rails tooling you already know and love.
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web