primevue
bootstrap-vue
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primevue | bootstrap-vue | |
---|---|---|
91 | 43 | |
7,482 | 14,456 | |
9.9% | 0.1% | |
9.9 | 5.1 | |
7 days ago | 3 months ago | |
CSS | JavaScript | |
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.
primevue
- PrimeVue: The Next-Gen UI Suite for Vue.js
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Build your own Vue UI library with Unstyled PrimeVue Core and Tailwind CSS
PrimeVue unstyled core and Tailwind CSS would be a perfect toolset if you require to build a custom UI library. The main idea is to create your UI component by wrapping a PrimeVue component, pass your props as fall through and configure the pass-through Tailwind preset locally instead of a global configuration.
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A simple Vue form validation composable with Zod
Here is a Stackblitz showcasing the useValidation composable in action https://stackblitz.com/edit/vue-use-validation-composable?file=src%2FApp.vue. The form is using components from PrimeVue and includes fields for a user's profile information, featuring nested address details.
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Ask HN: What framework/tools to use to build front end in 2023?
I'm for Vue/Nuxt. While reading React code is fine, I found it easy to shoot myself in the foot (causing circular effects or getting no reactivity) in a way Vue didn't. Vue feels more explicit. I like React's TSX for embedding HTML, but Vue's splitting of model and view appeals to me. I'm torn on that one.
Vue's ecosystem isn't as big, but it's an established framework. Both React and Vue feel easier to work with than Angular. RxJS is really cool, but also very comprehensive, making it difficult to keep the entire API in mind. At least for me, who only use it casually (used to use it more while at Google.) And on top of that, I have to know the Angular API. Angular used to be great for Material Design, but I nowadays there are MD packages for all systems.
Nuxt is for Vue what Next is for React: SSR and SSG. It adds auto-imports, which is nice. At this point, I see no reason to use Vue alone, since there's always something that can be pre-rendered. Perhaps the frontpage, or help pages. Since Vue itself provides entrypoints for SSR, Nuxt is more of a file-structure based router that just simplifies things. The documentation is a bit sparse on e.g. the difference between a plugin and a module, and I usually resort to navigating their source to understand things. That might not be everyone's cup of tea.
If what you're writing is a web app, there is also Quasar, built on top of Vue. Similar to Nuxt in that it ties in directory structure, build system and MVC framework. It is also a Material Design UI widget library. Their selling point is that you can build mobile apps, and web apps with the same library. I.e. like React Native. I felt it strays too far away from the core simplicity of Vue, unlike Nuxt, but it's no doubt a very capable framework.
Finally, I'm currently using PrimeVue as the UI widget/theming library on top of Vue. It's okay. :\ Switched to it when the Vue Bootstrap project decided to to support Vue 3 (or whatever the situation was.) I haven't come across anything that's actively broken or missing. The companion library PrimeFlex provides layout CSS. Annoyingly, they've decided to close GitHub FRs, and some (far from all) bugs, and just keep track of them internally. Makes it more dificult to communicate, but I don't know their reasoning behind it (they didn't respond when I asked.)
- A design system for the federal government
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90+ Vue UI Components Styled with Tailwind CSS
PrimeVue has recently announced the new Unstyled mode that removes the default styling and exposes the component internals via pass through props API. With the unstyled mode, components do the hard work by providing the feature set and accessibility out of the box but leaves out the styling to the user.
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Should I use Nuxt to build my potentially Amazon like complex web app.
- Primevue (https://primevue.org/) is also pretty good, and is getting an unstyled tailwind-compat version pretty soon
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Making own nuxt-like framework with bun
Till buchta v0.6 is out, the Vue plugin has a temporary solution on how to use Vue plugins. Currently we will focus on 3rd party vue components primevue
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Create a Shopping Cart with Vuejs and Pinia
Primevue is a big collection of Vuejs UI Components with top-notch quality to help you implement all your UI requirements in style.
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Mobile UI library
I use PrimeVue
bootstrap-vue
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10 UI Libraries You Should Explore for Your Next Vue.js Project
4. Bootstrap Vue Bootstrap Vue combines the power of Bootstrap, a popular CSS framework, with Vue.js. It provides a wide range of components and styling options. Check out the Bootstrap Vue website to learn more.
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[AskJS] UI libraries either backed by enterprises/quick fix of issues/has almost no issues with default styling that is customizable
Vue (BootstrapVue)
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What is the story with BootstrapVue now?
You say that Afaik is the creator? I didn't see him listed as a major contributor on github: https://github.com/bootstrap-vue/bootstrap-vue/graphs/contributors . Do you happen to have his Github profile link?
- Vue 3 UI Framework recommendations?
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Vue or React? Which one is easier to pick up?
For me personally one of the dealbrakers was bootstrap-vue still being stuck with Vue v2 / Bootsrap v4 to this day. react-bootstrap supports Bootstrap v5 since 2021 october.
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Top UI libraries for Vue JS in 2023
Bootstrap-Vue: A UI library that provides a range of components based on the popular Bootstrap framework, including forms, buttons, and navbars.
- Fragen bezüglich Flask, Zahlungsgateway, Design und JavaScript
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Noob question: What do you use to build your front ends?
BootstrapVue is the bundle: https://bootstrap-vue.org/
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Don't be that open-source user, don't be me
Yes. Please have the courtesy to feedback with a roadmap or prio of the issue. Especially for popular issues.
Asking, politely, for this should not label you as entitled freeloader. It is important input to make an informed decision wether one should just wait for the fix, workaround it, contribute a PR yourself, fork the component or drop it and consider alternatives.
One has to be careful with estimates though so they don’t become false promises. All respect to these maintainers but if I have to give one concrete example, consider following issue in a very popular Vue component, https://github.com/bootstrap-vue/bootstrap-vue/issues/5196 creating a upgrade deadlock for almost the entire Vuejs community. It’s the type of dependency that get so entrenched in everybody’s application that upgrading or moving away from it becomes very expensive and requires long term planning. As such, hundreds of comments there asking for estimates and also dozens of heavy names offering help in forms of PRs, forks or donations, all on a very polite level, but the maintainers kept promising it will be done “very soon” for almost 2 years straight. It appears the last months the war has been adding more obstacles so all respect for that, but even before the roadmap was hopelessly unpredictable.
I get it, as a volunteer other things in life often have higher prio, estimates tend to be optimistic and you might want to work on things in no particular order at all. What’s important is to be transparent, polite and communicate.
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Why We Switched from Python to Go
What's wrong with Angular? It being largely "batteries included" seemed pretty nice and I really liked the fact that TypeScript was a first class citizen - React and Vue both feel like it's been kind of tacked on, especially when a lot of additional libraries out there don't really have proper bindings.
That said, personally I also think that React kind of went downhill for a bit due to the hooks (after seeing a few projects become really nightmarish to debug due to render loops without clear causes for them, after people sprinkled one too many hooks in there).
Oh, and the Vue 2 to 3 migration is also a bit problematic because still many UI component libraries haven't been migrated over - currently actually using PrimeVue on a project because BootstrapVue still doesn't have proper support https://github.com/bootstrap-vue/bootstrap-vue/issues/5196
What are some alternatives?
Quasar Framework - Quasar Framework - Build high-performance VueJS user interfaces in record time
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
vuetify - 🐉 Vue Component Framework
bootstrap-vue-next - Early (but lovely) implementation of Vue 3, Bootstrap 5 and Typescript
sakai-vue - Free Vue Admin Template by PrimeVue
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
ant-design-vue - 🌈 An enterprise-class UI components based on Ant Design and Vue. 🐜
naive-ui - A Vue 3 Component Library. Fairly Complete. Theme Customizable. Uses TypeScript. Fast.
Vue.js - This is the repo for Vue 2. For Vue 3, go to https://github.com/vuejs/core
buefy - Lightweight UI components for Vue.js based on Bulma