Radium
tape
Radium | tape | |
---|---|---|
3 | 17 | |
7,432 | 5,757 | |
- | 0.0% | |
0.7 | 8.5 | |
about 2 years ago | about 2 months ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
Radium
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Object spread vs. Object.assign
options = Object.assign({}, optionsDefault, options); This is the commit that made me wonder.
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The React roadmap for beginners you never knew you needed.
Radium
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Tagged Template Literals - The Magic Behind Styled Components
If you have some experience with React, you probably came across styled-components. In the last few years, the concept of css-in-js became more popular, and there are multiple libraries that are available for us to use. styled-components is one of them, but you can also find Emotion, Radium, JSS, and more. In this post I'm not going to cover the pros and cons of traditional stylesheet files vs. styled-components, and instead - I'm going to focus on tagged template literals - the "magic" that let us use the styled-components syntax.
tape
- Having deps is a good thing, and disk space is infinite and free
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Express API Testing
Last but not least important are ava, uvu and tape; they are a really light and fast test runners.
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Unit testing: What to use, and how?
A more minimalist approach is this tape module and the TAP protocol. https://www.npmjs.com/package/tape
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Straight talk: Salary discussion thread
OK will do. Do you have any tips on finding a suitable project? Ideally I was hoping to to contribute to a piece of software that I actually use/know/like/want to improve. Given that, and my area of expertise, I had shortlisted Signal Desktop, and Tape.
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Find component by display name when the component is stateless functional, with Enzyme
Reactjs I have the following components: // Hello.jsexport default (React) => ({name}) => { return ( Hello {name ? name : 'Stranger'}! )}// App.jsimport createHello from './Hello'export default (React) => () => { const Hello = createHello(React) const helloProps = { name: 'Jane' } return ( )}// index.jsimport React from 'react'import { render } from 'react-dom'import createApp from './App'const App = createApp(React)render( , document.getElementById('app')) And I want to set up a test to see if the App component contains one Hello component. I tried the following, using Tape and Enzyme: import createApp from './App'import React from 'react'import test from 'tape'import { shallow } from 'enzyme'test('App component test', (assert) => { const App = createApp(React) const wrapper = shallow() assert.equal(wrapper.find('Hello').length === 1, true)}) But the result was that the length property of the find result was equal to 0, when I was expecting it to be equal to 1. So, how do I find my Hello component? Answer link : https://codehunter.cc/a/reactjs/find-component-by-display-name-when-the-component-is-stateless-functional-with-enzyme
- Nobody at Facebook has worked on Jest for years
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Tools for testing Functional Web Apps
For us at Begin and Architect, tape has been in use for several years. tape has a stable and straightforward API, routine maintenance updates, and outputs TAP, making it really versatile. While TAP is legible, it's not the most human-readable format. Fortunately, several TAP reporters can help display results for developers. Until recently, Begin's TAP reporter of choice was tap-spec. Sadly tap-spec wasn't kept up to date and npm began reporting vulnerabilities.
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Chaijs.com just let their domain expire
I really enjoy Ava [1] or anything assert-tape-like [2]. "uvu" [3] is getting a lot of love lately, but it's very feature limited and much of it's touted advantages are at the detriment to feature set.
[1] https://github.com/avajs/ava
[2] https://github.com/substack/tape
[3] https://github.com/lukeed/uvu
Jest is great for front-end (or full stack integration) testing, but I feel it's specialized for that use-case and doesn't always play nice with backend/middle-tier testing needs.
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Advanced Roadmap for React.js developers
-Jest -React testing library -Enzyme -Sinon -Mocha -Chai -AVA -Tape
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The React roadmap for beginners you never knew you needed.
Tape
What are some alternatives?
styled-components - Visual primitives for the component age. Use the best bits of ES6 and CSS to style your apps without stress 💅
jest - Delightful JavaScript Testing.
classnames - A simple javascript utility for conditionally joining classNames together
tap - Test Anything Protocol tools for node
Aphrodite - Framework-agnostic CSS-in-JS with support for server-side rendering, browser prefixing, and minimum CSS generation
ava - Node.js test runner that lets you develop with confidence 🚀
React CSS Modules - Seamless mapping of class names to CSS modules inside of React components.
mocha - ☕️ simple, flexible, fun javascript test framework for node.js & the browser
inline-style-prefixer - Autoprefixer for JavaScript style objects
hyperapp - 1kB-ish JavaScript framework for building hypertext applications
emotion - 👩🎤 CSS-in-JS library designed for high performance style composition
AVA