react-loadable
d3
Our great sponsors
react-loadable | d3 | |
---|---|---|
6 | 276 | |
16,591 | 107,465 | |
- | 0.3% | |
0.0 | 8.4 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 days ago | |
JavaScript | Shell | |
MIT License | ISC 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-loadable
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16 React Tools to Help You Keep Your Sanity in a Crazy World
Website: https://github.com/jamiebuilds/react-loadable
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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
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Awesome React Resources
react-loadable - A higher order component for loading components with promises
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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.
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React Lazy Loading; does it slow down your app?
Preloading is possible with react-loadable: https://github.com/jamiebuilds/react-loadable#preloading
d3
- Ask HN: Tips to get started on my own server
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Full Stack Web Development Concept map
d3 - very power visualization library enabling dynamic visualizations. docs
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Observable 2.0, a static site generator for data apps
Yep, Evidence is doing good work. We were most directly inspired by VitePress; we spent months rewriting both D3’s docs (https://d3js.org) and Observable Plot’s docs (https://observablehq.com/plot) in VitePress, and absolutely loved the experience. But we wanted a tool focused on data apps, dashboards, reports — observability and business intelligence use cases rather than documentation. Compared to Evidence, I’d say we’re trying to target data app developers more than data analysts; we offer a lot of power and expressiveness, and emphasize custom visualizations and interaction (leaning on Observable Plot or D3), as well as polyglot programming with data loaders written in any language (Python, R, not just SQL).
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Using Deno with Jupyter Notebook to build a data dashboard
D3.js: A robust library to visualize your data and create interactive data-driven visualizations.
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What is the technology stack used to create these live charts?
They are images so it could be any number of things, datawrapper, charts.js, d3.js to name a few options.
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How do you implement library types?
When I go to the homepage of types/d3 the only hint for any kind of documentation is what seems to be the main github page of d3. It's highly possible I'm missing something here, so sorry if I am but I can't find any documentation of how you are supposed to type these library objects.
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The top 11 React chart libraries for data visualization
Website: D3.js official site
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Frontend development roadmap
D3js
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How to use Next.js and Recharts to build an information dashboard
Recharts is a composable charting library built on React components and D3.js. It contains API’s which allow you to easily add 11 different highly configurable chart types to your React application. Recharts is one of the most popular React.js charting libraries with over 20k likes on GitHub.
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Best heatmap libraries for React (with demos)
D3.js: The advanced option
What are some alternatives?
echarts - Apache ECharts is a powerful, interactive charting and data visualization library for browser
GoJS, a JavaScript Library for HTML Diagrams - JavaScript diagramming library for interactive flowcharts, org charts, design tools, planning tools, visual languages.
vis
d4 - A friendly reusable charts DSL for D3
svg.js - The lightweight library for manipulating and animating SVG
sigma.js - A JavaScript library aimed at visualizing graphs of thousands of nodes and edges
paper.js - The Swiss Army Knife of Vector Graphics Scripting – Scriptographer ported to JavaScript and the browser, using HTML5 Canvas. Created by @lehni & @puckey
fabric.js - Javascript Canvas Library, SVG-to-Canvas (& canvas-to-SVG) Parser
visx - 🐯 visx | visualization components
vega - A visualization grammar.
loadable-components - The recommended Code Splitting library for React ✂️✨
Cytoscape.js - Graph theory (network) library for visualisation and analysis