reactfire
git
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reactfire | git | |
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17 | 616 | |
3,474 | 8,070 | |
0.5% | 1.2% | |
5.1 | 0.0 | |
15 days ago | 6 days ago | |
TypeScript | C | |
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.
reactfire
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Angular Fire equivalent for React?
ReactFire
- How can I use Firebase to monitor live circuit tripping in a train IoT project?
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Can't call Google Cloud Function from a react app. I get googleauth.js:17 Uncaught Error: Cannot find module 'child_process' in my browser's console
Are you using Firebase? If not, you probably should. You can call functions (with Auth) from your react app. There's a framework you can use to help: https://github.com/FirebaseExtended/reactfire
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Convex vs. Firebase
I was an early developer at Firebase. I think we made Firebase so easy to use and never spoke on about the technicals that the whole software ecosystem now underestimates the complexity involved. I see various Firebase competitors asserting various "mistakes it makes" without really understanding what it delivers, which is understandable because we never marketed it like that because we spoke only about how it can help you build easier.
The idea that n queries instead of a join is slow is not as true as you would think. Firestore supports streaming and pipelines at its core, and can reuse cache across operations. At the end of the day, the data goes over a narrow network channel. If you can saturate the channel, and don't leave any gaps, what's the performance difference if the data comes from a single query or many that are back-to-back. The data is transferred to the client either way. Both Firebase databases are pipelined, so this "many round trip" argument is not a decent argument if the client can issue the queries without waiting for responses (such as the code in this article).
The other is consistency levels and correctness. I constantly see devs call Firebase an eventually consistent database which is wrong, its causally consistent [1], and this makes a huge difference when trying to do OLTP. The offline capabilities are built on the consistency primitives, and it's the only way it can work. So while this convex article is banging on about "End-to-End Correctness Philosophy", they miss the most important quality of correctness, and if they are not careful, will miss the required engineering, and then be unable to deliver an offline cache over real-time streams. I see this playing out with Supabase, I warned them personally before they got into YCombinator that what they were building was not causally consistent. Since then, they have had to rearchitect their real-time features after shipping them. (I have not reviewed their latest design yet so I have no idea whether they have it right yet).
Many things sucked about Firebase. The bespoke security rules and the lack of views. So Convex is on the money shipping functions on the backend. I think Supabase is shipping competitors' mistakes with row-level security language. Personally, I think Firebase's mistakes can be fixed with the addition of an open-source Firebase server [1], as the clients are already open source and the mistakes are all to do with just the server. The real tech was always in the clients anyway (offline cache, connection management, operation queues).
It will be interesting to see if building expressly for React is a good idea. Firebase shipped many adapters, like https://github.com/FirebaseExtended/reactfire, using the "thin-waist" principle of not over-fitting. But Javascript technology moved from callbacks to async while Firebase was in the field, so the current API is not now idiomatic. But convex is setting itself for even more ecosystem fragility, what if React changes API or falls out of favor? This is a big risk! I hope they can roll with whatever happens!
[1] https://observablehq.com/@tomlarkworthy/redis-backend-1
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Do you have to use an ODM for firestore?
Since you mentioned you're also using React, we have a React specific library (ReactFire) that also helps out quite a bit.
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Get current user firestore database
Use ReactFire! It's our official library for React and Firebase. It has a bunch of useful hooks that probably handle most of the actions you are looking to do.
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Intro To ReactFire v4 - Login, Logout Create Account And Protected Routes
This is a quick walkthrough of a code example using ReactFire v4 in an application. The application supports login, logout, create an account, and protected routes. We also walk through two approaches for protecting routes since the AuthCheck component that existed in v3 no longer exists in v4 of ReactFire.
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Is state management (React Context, Redux) really needed for Firebase?
FWIW check out ReactFire, it gives you hooks and context for Firebase. Will likely feel more natural than using the vanilla platform-agnostic SDK.
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React Query + Firestore = ❤️
reactfire
git
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Understanding the Basics of Git.
Go to this link
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"Filename too long" error even after "fix" in git bash (windows 10)
I'd start by verifying that you're on the most current version of Git for Windows, and updating if that isn't the case. Followed by opening an issue here, if you're still encountering the problem.
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Gitting Started with Git: A Beginner's Guide to Version Control
Download the Git for Windows installer from the official website (https://gitforwindows.org/).
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pyaction 4.24.0 Released
This Docker image is designed to support implementing Github Actions with Python. As of version 4.0.0., it starts with the official python docker image as the base which is a Debian OS. It specifically uses python:3-slim to keep the image size down for faster loading of Github Actions that use pyaction. On top of the base, we've installed curl gpg, git, and the GitHub CLI. We added curl and gpg because they are needed to install the GitHub CLI, and they may come in handy anyway (especially curl) when implementing a GitHub Action.
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Save yourselves a lot of hassle (New to AwesomeWM PSA)
May I introduce you to https://git-scm.com/
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An AsyncAPI Example: Building Your First Event-driven API
Git
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Basics of Git
Before you start using Git, you need to install it on your computer. You can download and install Git from the official website (https://git-scm.com/). Once installed, open a terminal or command prompt and run the following commands to configure Git with your name and email:
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Publish an NPM Package from a GitHub Repository
Git: You should have Git installed on your machine. You can download it from the official website (https://git-scm.com/).
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Better Git Commits with `@commitlint`
When working on a project together, Git is a crucial tool that help teams collaborate smoothly. One of the key features is commits, which act like snapshots of the project's progress.
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"Мобильная" разработка. [Системы контроля версий, Git]
Официальный сайт Git
What are some alternatives?
react-query-firebase - React Query hooks for managing asynchronous operations with Firebase. Supports Authentication, Analytics, Firestore & Realtime Database.
git-lfs - Git extension for versioning large files
use-pagination-firestore - 🔥 React hook for non-cumulative pagination of Firebase Firestore collections
Chocolatey - Chocolatey - the package manager for Windows
strapi-connector-firestore - Strapi database connector for Firestore database on Google Cloud Platform.
HomeBrew - 🍺 The missing package manager for macOS (or Linux)
rowy - Low-code backend platform. Manage database on spreadsheet-like UI and build cloud functions workflows in JS/TS, all in your browser.
deemix-webui
react-famous - React bridge to Famo.us
Camunda BPM - Flexible framework for workflow and decision automation with BPMN and DMN. Integration with Quarkus, Spring, Spring Boot, CDI.
Redux Slim Async - :alien: A Redux middleware to ease the pain of tracking the status of an async action
sensible-side-buttons - A macOS menu bar app that enables system-wide navigation functionality for the side buttons on third-party mice.