PrimeFaces
milkman
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PrimeFaces | milkman | |
---|---|---|
16 | 10 | |
1,734 | 1,060 | |
1.4% | - | |
9.9 | 8.4 | |
about 7 hours ago | about 1 month ago | |
Java | Java | |
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.
PrimeFaces
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Shadcn: Beautifully designed components that you can copy-paste into your apps
> I use Quasar and Vue. This is my hammer for all nails, no matter the size of the nail.
Vue is great, especially with their Composition API (https://vuejs.org/guide/extras/composition-api-faq.html#why-...) and something like Pinia for state management, without the hassles of something like Redux: https://pinia.vuejs.org/
As for components, I really liked the idea behind PrimeVue/PrimeReact/PrimeNG/PrimeFaces (https://www.primefaces.org/) because I'm not aware of any other attempts of creating components that actually work similarly across different frameworks/libraries and it's really good because your skills carry over pretty well if you ever find yourself exploring a slightly different stack.
For what it's worth, the components also work decently (there's a whole list https://primevue.org/autocomplete/) and look okay (with various themes available, https://primevue.org/theming/), plus you can get examples (https://blocks.primevue.org/). Oh yeah, they also have their CSS utilities (a bit like Tailwind, https://primeflex.org/installation) and icons (https://primevue.org/icons).
I actually look forwards to the day where most of these concerns are less of an artisanal craft but rather a set of boring and well known things that just work well for quickly putting together a CRUD or whatever you need.
That said, I also explored VueRequest for handling network requests a bit more easily (https://www.attojs.org/guide/gettingStarted.html) and VueUse for stuff like LocalStorage (https://vueuse.org/guide/) and while it doesn't feel like I'm building a crappy alternative to Vuex and the complexity is reasonably manageable and the usability present, occasionally it all still feels a bit annoying to deal with - reactivity, ways to shuffle around data that I get from the back end, props, various bugs... so it's not all good, but still less complex than some of the things I've seen with React or Angular.
- A design system for the federal government
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PrimeFaces v13.0.0 Released
Visit the changelog for the complete list of changes.
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Any good Java frontend and backend frameworks?
Used this years ago for JSF apps https://www.primefaces.org/ I know they've kept it updated for current angular/react/vue JS front ends, but I've never used those. Might be worth a look.
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Primefaces responsive table not working
It might be related to this
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What do you prefer to use for frontend?
PrimeFaces (PrimeFaces official page has implementations for Angular, React and Vue)
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Rules for developers to design beautiful UIs without a designer
> I'd like to hear any strategy one has to deal with that. I have taken up Figma and Sketch so I can meet them "where they are" but still, plenty of disagreements can happen.
One option would be to use a premade design system or a component library/framework that gives you a consistent look and feel, most of those design decisions having a good enough baseline. Then just add a color theme and some branding on top of it and call it a day. It will also increase your development velocity and save you from some pixel pushing.
For an example of this, consider PrimeFaces: https://www.primefaces.org/
They have working components that are good enough (and support multiple themes, if need be), their own icon solution and also a CSS utility library, including stuff like layouts. For most projects it'll be enough to create something that works and looks okay.
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HTML with Superpowers: An Introduction to Web Components
> A UI library for React, Vue, Svelte, Solid, whatever... Imagine being able to have a component library that works with any of them (or none of them).
That seems to be a worthy goal, but I don't see that being usable in prod projects, at least not in the near future.
The closest I've seen is something like PrimeFaces, which has components for Angular, React and Vue, which is the majority of projects I've seen out there: https://www.primefaces.org (I've also used the Java JSF variety, it was... sometimes problematic)
If you need something that works the same (or as close as you can get) across multiple front end frameworks/libraries, while still having most of the components you could possibly want, I don't think there are many other options out there.
For example:
- Angular calendar: https://www.primefaces.org/primeng/calendar
- React calendar: https://www.primefaces.org/primereact/calendar/
- Vue calendar: https://www.primefaces.org/primevue/calendar
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What's the most extensive UI kit?
I liked Prime ( https://www.primefaces.org/ )
- ¿Qué tecnologías usarían para crear una web app de gestión?
milkman
- HTTPie Desktop: cross-platform API testing client for humans
- Announcing the new lightweight Postman API Client and sunsetting Scratch Pad!
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Need a fully local web alternative to Postman
- https://insomnia.rest/ - https://hoppscotch.io/ - https://github.com/karatelabs/karate - https://github.com/warmuuh/milkman
- Show HN: Restfox – A web based HTTP client inspired by Insomnia and Postman
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Postman Now Supports gRPC
There certainly are plenty of Postman alternatives out there, one that I've used before is Milkman: https://github.com/warmuuh/milkman
It's built on a plugin architecture, does gRPC, GraphQL, JDBC, Ws, et.al. Other plugins allow sharing of workspaces to various services. Written in Java/JavaFX, brew or chocolatey install.
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Ask HN: What are some tools / libraries you built yourself?
I built milkman[1], an alternative to postman because I wanted one tool to integrate with the whole web development stack. One tool that contains my SQL, rest and grpc calls to easily debug issues. Also nearly none of those kind of tools that existed supported SSE which I also use in my day to day work.
[1] https://github.com/warmuuh/milkman
- Your cool open source libraries
- Milkman – An Extensible Request/Response Workbench
- Do you have a github account ? What are you working on as a Java side-project ?
What are some alternatives?
Vaadin - Vaadin 6, 7, 8 is a Java framework for modern Java web applications.
castlemock - Castle Mock is a web application that provides the functionality to mock out RESTful APIs and SOAP web services.
Spring Boot - Spring Boot
grpc-browser - A web UI for browsing and executing gRPC operations in your .NET application
ZK - ZK is a highly productive Java framework for building amazing enterprise web and mobile applications
webtau - WebTau (web test automation) is a testing API, command line tool and a framework to write unit, integration and end-to-end tests. Test across REST-API, WebSocket, GraphQL, Browser, Database, CLI and Business Logic with a consistent set of matchers and concepts. REPL mode speeds-up tests development. Rich reporting cuts down investigation time.
Apache Wicket - Apache Wicket - Component-based Java web framework
Kreya - Kreya is a GUI client for REST and gRPC with innovative features for environments, authorizations and more.
jwt - Java Web Toolkit
bruno - Opensource IDE For Exploring and Testing Api's (lightweight alternative to postman/insomnia)
Spring - Spring Framework
insomnia - The open-source, cross-platform API client for GraphQL, REST, WebSockets, SSE and gRPC. With Cloud, Local and Git storage.