solid-site
vite
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solid-site | vite | |
---|---|---|
66 | 785 | |
156 | 64,595 | |
2.6% | 1.8% | |
8.4 | 9.9 | |
20 days ago | 4 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
- | 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)
vite
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Getting started with TiniJS framework
Homepage: https://vitejs.dev/
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Use CSS Variables to style react components on demand
Without any adding any dependencies you can connect react props to raw css at runtime with nothing but css variables (aka "custom properties"). If you add CSS modules on top you don't have to worry about affecting the global scope so components created in this way can be truly modular and transferrable. I use this with vite.
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RubyJS-Vite
Little confused as to why it has vite in it‘s name, it seems unrelated to https://vitejs.dev/
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Ask HN: How do we include JavaScript scripts in a browser these days?
it says in their docs that they recommend Vite https://vitejs.dev/
it goes like this.
1. you create a repo folder, you cd into it.
2. you create a client template using vite which can be plain typescript, or uses frameworks such as react or vue, at https://vitejs.dev/guide/
3. you cd in that client directory, you npm install, then you npm run dev, it should show you that it works at localhost:5173
4. you follow the instructions on your url, you do npm install @web3modal/wagmi @wagmi/core @wagmi/connectors viem
5. you follow the further instructions.
> It seems like this is for npm or yarn to pull from a remote repository maintained by @wagmi for instance. But then what?
you install the wagmi modules, then you import them in your js code, those code can run upon being loaded or upon user actions such as button clicks
> Do I just symlink to the node_modules directory somehow? Use browserify? Or these days I'd use webpack or whatever the cool kids are using these days?
no need for those. browserify is old school way of transpiling commonjs modules into browser-compatible modules. webpack is similar. vite replaces both webpack and browserify. vite also uses esbuild and swc under the hood which replaces babel.
> I totally get how node package management works ... for NODE. But all these client-side JS projects these days have docs that are clearly for the client-side but the ES2015 module examples they show seem to leave out all instructions for how to actually get the files there, as if it's obvious.
pretty much similar actually. except on client-side, you have src and dist folders. when you run "npm run build" vite will compile the src dir into dist dir. the outputs are the static files that you can serve with any http server such as npx serve, or caddy, or anything really.
> What gives? And finally, what exactly does "browserify" do these days, since I think Node supports both ES modules and and CJS modules? I also see sometimes UMD universal modules
vite supports both ecmascript modules and commonjs modules. but these days you'll just want to stick with ecmascript which makes your code consistently use import and export syntax, and you get the extra benefit of it working well with your vscode intellisense.
> In short, I'm a bit confused how to use package management properly with browsers in 2024: https://modern-web.dev/guides/going-buildless/es-modules/
if people want plain js there is unpkg.com and esm.sh way, but the vite route is the best for you as it's recommended and tested by the providers of your modules.
> And finally, if you answer this, can you spare a word about typescript? Do we still need to use Babel and Webpack together to transpile it to JS, and minify and tree-shake, or what?
I recommend typescript, as it gives you better type-safety and better intellisense, but it really depends. If you're new to it, it can slow you down at first. But as your project grows you'll eventually see the value of it. In vite there are options to scaffold your project in pure js or ts.
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Deploy a react projects that are inside a subdirectories to GitHub Pages using GitHub Actions (CI/CD)
First you have to know that all those react projects are created using Vite, and for each of them, you need change the vite.config.ts file by adding the following configuration:
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CSS Hooks and the state of CSS-in-JS
CSSHooks works with React, Prereact, Solid.js, and Qwik, and we’re going to use Vite with the React configuration. First, let's create a project called css-hooks and install Vite:
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Collab Lab #66 Recap
JavaScript React Flowbite Tailwind Firebase - Auth, Database, and Hosting Vite
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Use React.js with Laravel. Build a Tasklist app
For this full-stack single-page app, you'll use Vite.js as your frontend build tool and the react-beautiful-dnd package for draggable items.
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Top 10 Tools Every React Developer Needs in 2024
Vite
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Implementing SSO in React with GitHub OAuth2
Imagine a shiny new React app — that’s what we’ll build! We’ll use a cool tool called Vite to set it up.
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.
Next.js - The React Framework
purescript-halogen - A declarative, type-safe UI library for PureScript.
parcel - The zero configuration build tool for the web. 📦🚀
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.
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web
solid-start - SolidStart, the Solid app framework
swc - Rust-based platform for the Web
reagent - A minimalistic ClojureScript interface to React.js
astro - The web framework for content-driven websites. ⭐️ Star to support our work!
Rollup - Next-generation ES module bundler