solid-site
Svelte
Our great sponsors
solid-site | Svelte | |
---|---|---|
66 | 632 | |
156 | 76,402 | |
2.6% | 1.1% | |
8.4 | 9.9 | |
7 days ago | 6 days ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
- | 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-site
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Learn how to install SolidJS with Flowbite and Tailwind CSS
SolidJS is a popular and open-source declarative JavaScript library that empowers reactive UI interfaces for the web that ensures a performant benchmark, leverages the flexibility of JSX and also provides support for TypeScript, Astro, and Vite.
- Porting my old dynamic form render from React to SolidJS
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Question: Where does Nuxt 3 fit in, in 2023?
In 2023 there are a wealth of developer options for front-end: React, Vue, Svelte, Solid and many more.
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Using Solid Start with GitHub pages
You may or may not yet have heard about Solid Start, which is the much anticipated upcoming meta framework for Solid.js currently being in beta.
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Invoking Solid.js components from your Ember apps
SolidJS is a powerful, pragmatic and productive JavaScript library for building user interfaces with simple and performant reactivity. It stands on the shoulders of giants, particularly React and Knockout. If you've developed with React Functional Components and Hooks before, Solid will feel very natural because it follows the same philosophy as React, with unidirectional data flow, read/write segregation, and immutable interfaces.
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Reactivity Without Virtual DOM
Things like Solid (https://www.solidjs.com/) also have no virtual DOM, and the improves are in higher ceiling for performance, lower memory usage, simpler DX (components are not re-executed, there aren't any dependency arrays everywhere), easy high performance (no useRef this and useRef that to make things fast, no useCallback, no React.memo, these things are just obsolete).
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I also build my portfolio with Tailwind (links and details in coments)
Made with: - Windblade (my own version of Tailwind) - Solid JS - Vite
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Using ES6 Proxy for Cross-cut Concerns - A Real-world Example
SolidJS
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Separation of concerns slows you down
For the time being, this is how I approach web development on pretty much every project I have “architectural control” over. That’s how I worked with Solid.js and Tailwind CSS for the past 2 years. That’s how Vrite is being built. Has worked pretty well so far…
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What I want for 2023
SolidJS (They've started building the SolidStart and I want to give it a try)
Svelte
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How to optimise React Apps?
React has introduced measures like batching state updates, background concurrent rendering and memoization to tackle this. My opinion is that the best way to solve the problem is by improving their reactivity model. The app needs to be able to track the code that should be re-run on updating a given state variable and specifically update the UI corresponding to this update. Tools like solid.js and svelte work in this manner. It also eliminates the need for a virtual DOM and diffing.
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Episode 24/13: Native Signals, Details on Angular/Wiz, Alan Agius on the Angular CLI
Similarly to Promises/A+, this effort focuses on aligning the JavaScript ecosystem. If this alignment is successful, then a standard could emerge, based on that experience. Several framework authors are collaborating here on a common model which could back their reactivity core. The current draft is based on design input from the authors/maintainers of Angular, Bubble, Ember, FAST, MobX, Preact, Qwik, RxJS, Solid, Starbeam, Svelte, Vue, Wiz, and more…
- Rich Harris: Svelte parses HTML all wrong
- Mario meets Pareto: multi-objective optimization of Mario Kart builds
- Svelte parses HTML all wrong
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Svelte for Beginners: Easy Guide
Svelte is a powerful web framework that offers a fresh approach to building web applications. Its simplicity, reactivity model, and built-in features make it an excellent choice for developers looking to create efficient and maintainable applications. By following this guide, you should now have a good understanding of how to get started with Svelte and build your first components, routes, and transitions. You can read more about svelte on the official Svelte website.
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Trying to use dotnet watch with Svelte
Use .NET features (especially dotnet watch) as a setup for a client-side Svelte application, starting from a simple C# console app.
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Why I keep an eye on the Vue ecosystem and you should too
Volar originally was Vue3's language support tool for VScode (I don't know about other editors). By today, volar has become a language indipendent framework to create language tools. It might still be a bit early for the dev with skill issues like me to use it and build some tools, but astro and svelte already use Volar to create their language tools.
- Svelte Tenets by Rich Harris
What are some alternatives?
Ionic Framework - A powerful cross-platform UI toolkit for building native-quality iOS, Android, and Progressive Web Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.
Alpine.js - A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.
purescript-halogen - A declarative, type-safe UI library for PureScript.
lit - Lit is a simple library for building fast, lightweight web components.
stencil - A toolchain for building scalable, enterprise-ready component systems on top of TypeScript and Web Component standards. Stencil components can be distributed natively to React, Angular, Vue, and traditional web developers from a single, framework-agnostic codebase.
solid - A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces. [Moved to: https://github.com/solidui/solid]
solid-start - SolidStart, the Solid app framework
qwik - Instant-loading web apps, without effort
reagent - A minimalistic ClojureScript interface to React.js
awesome-blazor - Resources for Blazor, a .NET web framework using C#/Razor and HTML that runs in the browser with WebAssembly.
astro - The web framework for content-driven websites. ⭐️ Star to support our work!
Next.js - The React Framework