react-hot-loader
Cycle.js
react-hot-loader | Cycle.js | |
---|---|---|
7 | 11 | |
12,266 | 10,235 | |
- | -0.0% | |
0.0 | 4.1 | |
about 1 year ago | 5 months ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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react-hot-loader
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ReactJS Good Practices
React Hot Loader - Tweak React components in real time
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Front-end Guide
Developer Experience - There are a number of tools that improves the development experience with React. React Developer Tools is a browser extension that allows you to inspect your component, view and manipulate its props and state. Hot reloading with webpack allows you to view changes to your code in your browser, without you having to refresh the browser. Front end development involves a lot of tweaking code, saving and then refreshing the browser. Hot reloading helps you by eliminating the last step. When there are library updates, Facebook provides codemod scripts to help you migrate your code to the new APIs. This makes the upgrading process relatively pain-free. Kudos to the Facebook team for their dedication in making the development experience with React great.
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How to implement hot module reloading in a programming language?
I am considering how to make my compiler (which outputs JavaScript), output patch changes, which somehow update the server or browser with the code changes, so you don't have to shutdown/restart the server or refresh the page. I was going to take a look at the react-hot-loader source code, but it's a little too abstract, it will take a while / few days at least to start to grok.
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How is React's Hot Module Reloading implemented (at a medium-high level of detail)?
I am starting to look through the source of react-hot-loader, but it is no insignificant beast. Can someone explain at a high level how this is implemented, just in enough detail so one could reason about how to reimplement this functionality in another programming language?
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The following modules couldn't be hot updated: (Full reload needed)
[HMR] bundle rebuildingclient.js?3ac5:126 [HMR] bundle rebuilt in 557msprocess-update.js?e13e:27 [HMR] Checking for updates on the server...process-update.js?e13e:81 [HMR] The following modules couldn't be hot updated: (Full reload needed)This is usually because the modules which have changed (and their parents) do not know how to hot reload themselves. See http://webpack.github.io/docs/hot-module-replacement-with-webpack.html for more details.process-update.js?e13e:89 [HMR] - ./src/containers/root.tsxprocess-update.js?e13e:89 [HMR] - ./src/index.tsx I've stepped through these steps as best I can tell, but am still having no luck.
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Javascript require vs require .default
I'm using react-hot-loader and I'm very confused about its example code:
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Awesome React Resources
react-hot-loader - Tweak React components in real time
Cycle.js
- Could angular possibly compile rxjs Ahead Of Time?
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Can be the future of JSX be Functional first?
Seems like you might be interested in this
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Front-end Guide
Cycle
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[AskJS] Opinions In Favor of Coding Document Fragments in JS?
This is the standard way of going about things in Mithril and Cycle. Elm as well doesn't use an XML knockoff for view code- and as a fun fact, the original version of React didn't either.
- What is a really cool thing you would want to write in Rust but don't have enough time, energy or bravery for?
- Solid.js feels like what I always wanted React to be
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callbag-rs: An implementation of the callbag spec
For example, an FRP framework (created by the same author who later wrote the callbag spec): https://cycle.js.org/
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Does it make sense to use Scala.js/Laminar in the context of a startup?
TypeScript is relatively mainstream at this point, and I think that's good news. If you want to crank the type-safety and pure FP dials on it to 11, you certainly can do that. I have a project that I've based largely on this post, including the "hardcore" section. However, instead of Redux and otherwise plain React, I've chosen to use Cycle.js and the lessons from this post to use React in a very purely Functional Reactive Programming Way.
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Flame: A PureScript front-end framework inspired by the Elm architecture
This post links to a PureScript project that is probably the easiest PS framework around.
ReScript + rescript-react is a good alternative. Less safe, waaaay more verbose; but backed by Facebook.
This is quite cute (in TypeScript though): https://github.com/cyclejs/cyclejs
And Yew is super cool, it goes the WASM route (in Rust): https://github.com/yewstack/yew
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My Open Source Journey
From now on I was on what I would call a typical open source trajectory. I used the Cycle.js framework to rewrite my frontend and in that process I hit some walls. I eventually figured that the error was on my side and that I was just missing some information to avoid the error. To spare others the hours of debugging I started to contribute small patches to the documentation. At the same time I also found some missing features that I voiced in GitHub issues.
What are some alternatives?
tsdx - Zero-config CLI for TypeScript package development
RxJS - A reactive programming library for JavaScript
react-devtools - An extension that allows inspection of React component hierarchy in the Chrome and Firefox Developer Tools.
MobX - Simple, scalable state management.
eslint-plugin-react - React-specific linting rules for ESLint
Bacon - Functional reactive programming library for TypeScript and JavaScript
Next.js - The React Framework
Most.js - Ultra-high performance reactive programming
ESLint - Find and fix problems in your JavaScript code.
Cycle.js (react-native) - Cycle.js driver that uses React Native to render
react-hooks-testing-library - 🐏 Simple and complete React hooks testing utilities that encourage good testing practices. [Moved to: https://github.com/testing-library/react-hooks-testing-library]
Elm - Compiler for Elm, a functional language for reliable webapps.