react-loadable
babel-plugin-react-css-modules
Our great sponsors
react-loadable | babel-plugin-react-css-modules | |
---|---|---|
6 | 1 | |
16,595 | 2,047 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | over 1 year ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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-loadable
-
16 React Tools to Help You Keep Your Sanity in a Crazy World
Website: https://github.com/jamiebuilds/react-loadable
-
Some Very Cool (Underrated maybe) React Libraries
React Loadable: This library makes it easy to split your React code into smaller, lazy-loaded chunks that can be loaded on demand. This can significantly improve the initial loading time of your application, especially for large and complex apps. https://github.com/jamiebuilds/react-loadable
-
Unit Testing dynamically imported React Component
I have a very simple React component that uses react-loadable to dynamically import another component. The code looks something akin to the following:
-
Awesome React Resources
react-loadable - A higher order component for loading components with promises
-
How to choose a third party package
It's very important that you are choosing an active project instead of a dead/unmaintained project. An active project improves over time through community feedback. An unmaintained project does not move forward, fix functional bugs or patch security issues. Sometimes, a very popular package can be abandoned and go into a "frozen" state with many open issues and pull requests. It might have been a great solution in the past, but this is a sign that we have to move on. An example is react-loadable. It was a great solution for a very long time for code-splitting in React. I totally loved it. But it's stale now with many issues and PRs since 2018 (this post is written at the end of 2021). Now, if I need to split code in React, I use loadable-components, which is in active development, becoming more popular, patches bugs reported by the community, and most importantly, solves my problems. My personal advice: choose a package that's active in the last 3-6 months, with issues that are being resolved and PRs that are being merged.
-
React Lazy Loading; does it slow down your app?
Preloading is possible with react-loadable: https://github.com/jamiebuilds/react-loadable#preloading
babel-plugin-react-css-modules
What are some alternatives?
loadable-components - The recommended Code Splitting library for React ✂️✨
emotion - 👩🎤 CSS-in-JS library designed for high performance style composition
react-snap - 👻 Zero-configuration framework-agnostic static prerendering for SPAs
jsx-control-statements - Neater If and For for React JSX
Next.js - The React Framework
webpack-react-boilerplate - Minimal React 16 and Webpack 4 boilerplate with babel 7, using the new webpack-dev-server, react-hot-loader, CSS-Modules
babel-plugin-styled-components - Improve the debugging experience and add server-side rendering support to styled-components
react-atomic-design - 🔬 How the Atomic Design methodology can create a great design system from scratch and make better developers.
ultra - Zero-Legacy Deno/React Suspense SSR Framework
react-toolbox - A set of React components implementing Google's Material Design specification with the power of CSS Modules
react-lazy-with-preload - React.lazy() with preload support!
front-end-guide - 📚 Study guide and introduction to the modern front end stack.