simplelocalize-cli
react-styleguidist
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simplelocalize-cli | react-styleguidist | |
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30 | 18 | |
53 | 10,791 | |
- | 0.1% | |
8.6 | 4.4 | |
about 13 hours ago | 2 months ago | |
Java | 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.
simplelocalize-cli
- How do you deal with internationalisation (i18n) in your app?
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Is it worth the effort occommodating multiple languages in your game?
shamless plug You can use my app for that, it doesn’t require monthly subscription. 😉
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A Type-safe i18n library
In favor of typesafe-i18n: - Offers an option for asynchronous loading of locales. It's in the roadmap for i18nifty but as of today it doesn't features it. - It's lighter 1.3Kb vs 22Kb for i18nifty (I could work on reducing the size but it isn't high in my priorities). - Support third party localisation services such as https://locize.com/ https://lokalise.com/ or https://simplelocalize.io/.
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How to translate NextJS app with next-i18next?
NextJS, a well-known framework among React developers, provides multiple libraries that create a very developer-friendly environment. The most popular ones are i18Next, next-translate and, our main focus in this blog post, next-18next, a translation library that does a fantastic job helping in translation management. The following blog post will show you how to set up next-i18n in your NextJS app and manage translations with SimpleLocalize. Take a look at our demo app for the reference.
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Code base in my last company
own SaaS my salary is now higher than before 😌
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Translating (localizing) my web app in 107 languages - insights
I know the advantage of this approach is that you can do it for free, but in general you could also use something like SimpleLocalize (I’m the author, backend uses Spring and Java 18😎) You can keep translations there, auto-translate and host them on CDN. In my approach, the cool thing is that you can fix the incorrect auto-translated texts in the editor. It supports DeepL and Google Translate, there is a free forever plan and free 14-day trial.
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AoE IV Stats is now available in 15 languages (and show more data)
Wow, that’s great! I was thinking that you used some kind of software like SimpleLocalize to use auto-translation. :)
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Internalization in Spring Boot Strategy
Don’t implement it on your own. Use something like SimpleLocalize and use their REST API and CDN. Client will have a nice panel to edit/change translations and you will get a nice API to fetch translated content.
- Tell HN: A Conversation Needs to Be Had over Subscription Software
- Number formatting in JavaScript
react-styleguidist
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45 NPM Packages to Solve 16 React Problems
react-styleguidist
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Why I quit open source
My most popular open source project, React Styleguidist, has over 10K stars on GitHub, and yet, I couldn’t manage to build a community around it, and to make it self-sufficient. The project is too big for one person to build it, and to manage issues and pull requests.
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7 best ReactJS developer tools to simplify your workflow
React Styleguidist is a tool that generates a living style guide for React components. This tool helps developers to document and showcase their components, making it easier for other developers to understand and use them. You can visit its official website to learn more: https://react-styleguidist.js.org/.
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Building a design system with Radix
Because documentation is so important, our sample project has been preconfigured with React Styleguidist, a development environment for building React components. We’ll use this tool to document the components as we build them out.
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Style Guide for Effectively Commenting and Documenting your code
Today I had to present my work on a React Native app for the last 2 months in a meeting in front of the CEO. He was pleased with my work the only critique was more comments and documentation. Afterward my immediate supervisor told me to look up "Documentation Style Guides". He said he's not concerned which pattern I chose just learn one and stick with it. After searching I found this https://react-styleguidist.js.org/documenting which seems to address what I'm looking for. I just figured I would ask if anyone else out there has experience with a certain approach and has good documentation/tutorials to learn such an approach. Thanks in advance!
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8 Best Tools for React Ecosystem You Need Right Now
Checkout React Styleguidist by Clicking here
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Going offline
For many years I was enjoying working on my open source projects of all sizes: large like React Styleguidist or a tiny library that nobody else is using. However, the expectation that you owe someone free work to fix bugs in their projects and add features they need to do their job, the rude comments on the issues, the hit and run pull requests where you spend an hour reviewing the code and the author never comes back to answer your comments, made it less and less enjoyable, and my attempts to pretend that it doesn’t hurt my mental health became less and less successful.
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9 Must-have React Developer Tools to Create Better Apps Faster
This is yet another tool that offers an interactive way of creating and sharing UI components. And there’s no better representation of how React Styleguidist works than this GIF. On the right window, you have the code. The left window is where that code is concurrently rendered into a UI. And if required, you can also test and directly edit the code on the rendered side.
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Check Out My Table Component!
You can play with these examples along with my other components in this library directly within the documentation, which was generated using React Styleguidist.
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React library development - How do you render your components during development?
So far, it seems that Storybook with it's interactive props and canvas playground is the most popular solution. Simplified versions, like Styleguidist or Docz do not provide enough props and canvas playground functionality to see them as alternatives. I would consider these two only valid documentation alternatives, but not for active development like Storybook.
What are some alternatives?
lowdefy - The config web stack for business apps - build internal tools, client portals, web apps, admin panels, dashboards, web sites, and CRUD apps with YAML or JSON.
storybook - Storybook is a frontend workshop for building UI components and pages in isolation. Made for UI development, testing, and documentation.
react-atellier - The smartest way to share interactive components with your team.
docz - ✍ It has never been so easy to document your things!
mighty-react-snippets - Crafty React & Redux snippets for Atom Editor
cosmos-js - Sandbox for developing and testing UI components in isolation
component-controls - A next-generation tool to create blazing-fast documentation sites.
Next.js - The React Framework
React PWA - An upgradable boilerplate for Progressive web applications (PWA) with server side rendering, build with SEO in mind and achieving max page speed and optimized user experience.
react-heatpack
story-tab - ⚡ Create React components demos in a zap