react-loadable
recharts
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react-loadable | recharts | |
---|---|---|
6 | 35 | |
16,595 | 22,600 | |
- | 2.5% | |
0.0 | 9.7 | |
over 1 year 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-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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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:
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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
recharts
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recharts VS MUI X - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 20 Jan 2024
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Complete Tutorial: React Admin Panel with refine and daisyUI
We first build the dashboard page where we present stats for relevant KPIs in cards, charts and a table. We use the React-based Recharts library for plotting our data.
- Climate Change Tracker
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Recharts - Call for contributors
Hi all, I am one of the (few) current maintainers of the relatively popular recharts charting library.
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13 Must Know Libraries for a React Developer
This library has more than 20K stars on GitHub and more than 1.3 million weekly downloads on NPM as of August 2023.
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Level Up Your Web App with Stunning React Charts: Introducing the Top 10 React Charts Libraries
Recharts is another React charting library that simplifies creating charts by providing a wide range of chart components out of the box. It is built on top of D3.js but abstracts away the complexities, making it easier for React developers to create interactive and visually appealing charts and graphs. Recharts leverage the power of SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) for rendering, allowing charts to be scalable and fit on any screen size.
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Build an EMI Calculator with Next.js, TypeScript, Tailwind CSS, Recoil and Recharts
Recharts is a charting library that allows you to create attractive and informative data visualizations.
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Making YouTube video with React
The next scene I had in mind was an animated pie chart. There are so many charting libraries around that I was sure one of them would fit my needs. The pie chart below was rendered using recharts, utilizing its mount animation. To get the results, I recorded my screen like the first scene.
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Building a multi-framework dashboard with Astro
This is the last integration of this article, and maybe the most fun! A dashboard cannot be considered complete unless we show a chart or diagram to visually display information. For this part of the demo, we’ll use mui for the components and recharts for the graphs.
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I made a DEEP WORK discord bot & dashboard
I built the bot off a typescript discordjs template I found on Replit.com. The Dashboard is built with Wasp (a full-stack React and ExpressJS framework that makes prototyping super quick) and with [recharts](https://www.npmjs.com/package/recharts) (a sexy charts package built on top of D3js). On the backend, I do a lot of work to the data to be able to pass it in different categories to the frontend
What are some alternatives?
loadable-components - The recommended Code Splitting library for React ✂️✨
react-chartjs-2 - React components for Chart.js, the most popular charting library
react-snap - 👻 Zero-configuration framework-agnostic static prerendering for SPAs
heatmap.js - 🔥 JavaScript Library for HTML5 canvas based heatmaps
Next.js - The React Framework
Chart.js - Simple HTML5 Charts using the <canvas> tag
babel-plugin-styled-components - Improve the debugging experience and add server-side rendering support to styled-components
react-vis - Data Visualization Components
ultra - Zero-Legacy Deno/React Suspense SSR Framework
Highcharts JS - Highcharts JS, the JavaScript charting framework
react-lazy-with-preload - React.lazy() with preload support!
react-sparkline - React component for rendering simple sparklines