react-desktop
slate
Our great sponsors
react-desktop | slate | |
---|---|---|
6 | 26 | |
9,495 | 28,945 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 8.4 | |
10 months ago | 5 days ago | |
JavaScript | 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.
react-desktop
-
Is react relevant to target multiple platforms?
I never tried React but it can be a great thing to learn it if there is a React Native-like module for building desktop apps. I saw that there's a module for that called react-desktop but it seems like the repo is not active anymore. Are there ways to use React as a base to target windows, macOS, android, and iOS and web?
- React UI Components for macOS High Sierra and Windows 10
-
9 Ways You Can Use React Today in 2022
react-desktop provides a set of ready-to-use react components with the goal of bringing a native desktop experience, featuring many Windows 10 and MacOS Sierra components:
-
Any react library with classic OS controls/look and feel UI?
This one does exactly what I'm looking for but seems to be not maintained anymore. Does anyone know an active and complete alternative? it must support Windows UI. Mac support would be needed too but the priority by now is Windows.
-
React Libraries
react-desktop - OS X and Windows UI components built with React
-
⚛️ 25+ Top React UI Component Library.
13. React Desktop
slate
- 5 Not-So-Typical React Libraries for an Outstanding Project
-
Which Rich Text Editor to use ?
- it creates a layout based on rows and cells, so it support multi-column layout - each cell can contain a different "cell-plugin", - richt-text editor based on https://github.com/ianstormtaylor/slate is built in and comes with its own plugin system. It can do weight, italic, block-types, alignment and lists and can be extended as you want (even with elements storing data and interactive components) - you can create custom cell plugins based on a schema (or custom control ui) and a component that should be rendered - it stores an object tree that represent it, not html. It therefore can contain any react component, which is great if you want to allow your editors to add interactive components or components that you already built as part of the app - i carefully optimized for SSR and bundle size, so no editor ui is rendered nor loaded. editor ui is only loaded on the client if you disable readOnly. (lazy loading) - it mainly tested with nextjs, since i used it for content-heavy pages. - its not yet tested with react-server components, but it should actually work in read-only mode
-
What is your goto WYSIWYG Editor?
Finally there's Slate and Lexical which are super powerful in terms of customizability and extensibility. They're great options for when the editing experience plays a major role in the product.
-
Looking for the best React Editor library
Slate, as per its documentation, is a completely customizable framework for building rich text editors. Therefore, it doesn't offer a feature-rich text editor but instead provides tools to build one. Let's create a component called Slate and see what the Slate editor looks like.
-
Slate | Editor in 10min with Next.js and TS ✍️
Link to Repo
-
Is there a good alternative to Draft-js rich text editor?
Word of warning about Slate: I love the API and the design goals, but it appears to suffer from some fundamental issues. We were experiencing issues similar to this one and a team of multiple 10+ year experienced frontend devs couildn't figure out what was going on. I had to completely rip out a feature we had built with Slate and had to reimplement a new version from scratch with Lexical. So far we have no issues other than those inherent to rich text editing.
-
Lexical – a web text editor framework that powers Facebook
We're trying to choose between Lexical and Slate at work. Do you have any examples that would be similar to this? https://github.com/ianstormtaylor/slate/blob/main/site/examp...
-
A good rich text editor for reactjs?
If you are going to customise a ton of functionalities and/or implement new functionality I suggest using SlateJS. If not, have a look at Sun editor.
-
Ace, CodeMirror, and Monaco: A Comparison of the Code Editors You Use in Browser
You definitely need to give Slate (https://github.com/ianstormtaylor/slate) a try - the best editor framework I've used.
-
Best WYSIWYG editor for Vue that supports structured content?
Slate: Looks very promising, but it's for React. (Someone has floated the idea of making it framework-agnostic, but the maintainers haven't committed to that goal yet.)
What are some alternatives?
aframe-react - :atom: Build virtual reality experiences with A-Frame and React.
Draft.js - A React framework for building text editors.
react-virtualized - React components for efficiently rendering large lists and tabular data
quill - Quill is a modern WYSIWYG editor built for compatibility and extensibility.
arwes - Futuristic Sci-Fi UI Web Framework.
ProseMirror - The ProseMirror WYSIWYM editor
admin-on-rest
tiptap - The headless rich text editor framework for web artisans.
react-snap - 👻 Zero-configuration framework-agnostic static prerendering for SPAs
lexical - Lexical is an extensible text editor framework that provides excellent reliability, accessibility and performance.
shards-react - ⚛️A beautiful and modern React design system.
Editor.js - A block-style editor with clean JSON output