solid-router
solid
solid-router | solid | |
---|---|---|
8 | 117 | |
1,062 | 8,173 | |
2.9% | 0.0% | |
9.0 | 0.0 | |
3 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
TypeScript | HTML | |
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.
solid-router
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Building an E-commerce Store: A Step-by-Step Guide with Solidjs and Medusa
Solid Router - https://github.com/solidjs/solid-router
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Fastify DX and SolidJS in the Real World
Fastify DX follows the same routing principles as Next.js and Remix. The first page is /pages/index.{js|ts} and other pages can be linked to by using solid-app-router. Dashboard would link to /pages/dashboard.{js|ts} and SolidJS Article would link to /pages/articles/[id].{js|ts}. SSR, Streaming etc. can be fine-tuned by exporting variables in the page. Check out the examples for streaming, SSR, etc. in the fastify dx starter kit
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Routing with single page web application
Hello, I've recently created a single page web app with multiple routes. I'm using vercel for hosting and solid app router (https://github.com/solidjs/solid-app-router) for the router bit. When I go to my page on vercel and click on a link, for example, /help then reload the page it leads to 404 not found. If I go straight to that link it has the same error. In my dev environment it functions as I'd expect. After reloading it loads the help page. Is there a way to configure vercel to behave correctly?
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Show HN: I made React with a faster Virtual DOM
Agree wrt. Solid being easier to reason about.
Is the router you are using solid-app-router [1] ? Have been working with it for last few months and it has been generally stable (my usecases are not particularly complex though).
The docs for the solidjs core has also massively improved recently.
[1] https://github.com/solidjs/solid-app-router
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SolidJS vs. React: Comparing declarative UI libraries
With regards to third-party libraries, Solid does not have a lot yet, but it does have first-party libraries. Its first-party libraries are the equivalent of other popular libraries in other JavaScript libraries, such as Solid App Router for routing, Solid Testing Library for writing component tests, and Solid Transition Group for animations.
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Add vite-plugin-pages to SolidJS
Since official SolidJS starter template are vite-based we can easily use vite-plugin-pages to create automatic routing a.k.a file based routing with official solid-app-router package.
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Solidjs – JavaScript UI Library
Hmm.. Remix is based around their router. And a nested router is what we need to for Solid (see Solid App Router https://github.com/solidjs/solid-app-router). I think the challenge is that we don't render like React. Not at all. I've found most cases where that assumption exists to be incompatible.
That being said the work has already started on a starter with Nested Routing/Automatic File Based Routing + Code Splitting/Parallelized Data Fetching/Streaming SSR/Multiple deployment adapters. We're given it the same focus on performance that we've given the rest of Solid.
Here is the recent Vercel Edge Function demo we made with it: https://twitter.com/RyanCarniato/status/1453283158149980161
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Solid vs React - the Fastest VS the Most Popular UI Library
Solid has an impressive collection of first-party tools developed by its creator - Ryan Carniato - and other contributors. There you’ll find Solid equivalents of some popular libraries from other ecosystems, like Solid Transition Group, Solid Refresh (for Hot Module Reloading - HMR), Solid App Router, and more!
solid
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Simple Lasts Longer
This doesn't support the various consumer cloud storage APIs, but you've just reminded me of a project I ran into years ago that seems to still be around: https://remotestorage.io/
There's also Solid which attempts to do something similar: https://solidproject.org/
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The current state of the Web and what is the next step in its evolution.
It is surprising to me this is not talked about more. I see little to none online news, podcasts, YouTube videos or anything else where this is discussed. I only found out about it because of research I did on Tim Berners-Lee in preparation for a Career Day talk at my kids middle school. Otherwise I would have probably not known about it still today. And even after I found out and started watching YouTube videos on the topic, YouTube won't even suggest any related videos about it even after already watching multiple videos on the subject (Web 3.0, Solid Project, Decentralized Web...etc).. is Big Tech trying to keep the web from evolving into what Sir Tim Berners-Lee is proposing?
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Write libraries instead of services, where possible
It's only an unreasonable amount of work if you assume that the user is managing a separate storage backend for each library. If you take the Tim Berners-Lee approach (re: https://solidproject.org/) then each user is only managing one storage backend: the one that stores their data. The marginal cost of hooking in one more library low.
We just have to get a little more fed up with all of these services and then the initial cost of setting it up in the first place will be worth it. Any day now...
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Manas: Storage servers confirming to Solid protocol
Solid is a web native protocol to enable interoperable, read-write, collaborative, and decentralized web, truer to web's original vision.
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Manas: Solid protocol storage server in Rust for decentralized web
Manas project(https://github.com/manomayam/manas/tree/main) aims to create a modular framework and ecosystem to create correct, robust storage servers adhering to Solid protocol in rust.
[Solid](https://solidproject.org/) is a web native protocol to enable interoperable, read-write, collaborative, and decentralized web, truer to web's original vision.
Solid adds to existing Web standards to realise a space where individuals can maintain their autonomy, control their data and privacy, and choose applications and services to fulfil their needs.
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My vision of the semantic web...correct me if I'm wrong.
You're describing Solid, not the Semantic Web. Granted, Solid uses Semantic technologies to achieve it. https://solidproject.org/
- Threads : à peine lancé, le concurrent de Twitter crée par Facebook compte 10 millions de membres
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The problem with federated web apps
Tim Berners-Lee's Solid project is working on that. Put data in "pods" that are stored on pod servers, which are federated. You can self-host.
It could be a federated layer of identity & personal content decoupled from social platforms.
https://solidproject.org/
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Update of the RDF and SPARQL (RDF star) families of specifications
Check out https://solidproject.org (If you want a short intro I recently gave a ~30min talk about it: https://noeldemartin.com/fosdem)
- Solid, a spec that lets people store their data securely in decentralized Pods
What are some alternatives?
solid-transition-group - SolidJS components for applying animations when children elements enter or leave the DOM.
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solid-refresh
orbitdb - Peer-to-Peer Databases for the Decentralized Web
js-framework-benchmark - A comparison of the performance of a few popular javascript frameworks
Peergos - A p2p, secure file storage, social network and application protocol
lume - Create 3D web applications with HTML. Bring a new depth to your DOM!
kanidm - Kanidm: A simple, secure and fast identity management platform
mikado - Mikado is the webs fastest template library for building user interfaces.
Nullboard - Nullboard is a minimalist kanban board, focused on compactness and readability.