stencil
mitosis
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stencil | mitosis | |
---|---|---|
44 | 20 | |
11,484 | 8,357 | |
1.1% | 5.1% | |
9.8 | 9.4 | |
1 day ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
stencil
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The benefits of Web Component Libraries
Web component browser APIs aren't that many, and not that hard to grasp (if you don't know about them, have a look at Google's Learn HTML section and MDN's Web Components guide); but creating a web component actually requires taking care of many small things. This is where web component libraries come in very handy, freeing us of having to think about some of those things by taking care of them for us. Most of the things I'll mention here are handled one way of another by other libraries (GitHub's Catalyst, Haunted, Hybrids, Salesforce's LWC, Slim.JS, Ionic's Stencil) but I'll focus on Google's Lit and Microsoft's FAST here as they probably are the most used web component libraries out there (ok, I lied, Lit definitely is, FAST not that much, far behind Lit and Stencil; but Lit and FAST have many things in common, starting with the fact that they are just native web components, contrary to Stencil that compiles to a web component). Both Lit and FAST leverage TypeScript decorators to simplify the code even further so I'll use that in examples, even though they can also be used in pure JS (decorators are coming to JS soon BTW). I'll also leave the most apparent yet most complex aspect for the end.
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Web Components
Look into https://stenciljs.com/ .
We used https://stenciljs.com/ for web components to be consumed by angular, AEM and react at a previous employer. It uses tsx/jsx. Components are easy to write and it has good documentation.
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Hexagonal architecture as a solution to the obsolescence of UI frameworks
For the creation of web components, even though writing in vanilla js is an option, we have chosen to do it via a dedicated framework, which will solve many potential integration/bundling problems. The choice of the framework will be made according to different factors that are not part of the scope of this article.
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Ask HN: Help me pick a front-end framework
Maybe have a look at Stencil (+ Ionic). https://stenciljs.com/
Pro:
- Simple to learn
- Doesn't change all the time
- First-class TypeScript support
- Good default UI via Ionic
- Compiles to Web Components (although to be honest, this doesn't really matter)
- Easy testing
- Ionic as a company invests in Ionic the framework + Stencil the compiler. Might be around in 10 years, altough things could change. But this is true for all frameworks.
- You basically get an iOS/Android app for free, if you just dump the output in Capacitor (also developed by Ionic the company).
Cons:
- Stencil is not very widespread as a frontend framework.
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A Letter to D1sc0rd for not Supporting the Linux Desktop
because react-native is only reactlike. I may or may not want to stick with that. I think something like this is leading us towards a better and less UI lib specific approach. https://github.com/ionic-team/stencil/ . I don't think is 100% where we end up, but it is based on web components, so it's moving the entire ecosystem forward, not just a slice of it.
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By Crayons and For Crayons
The app is built using vanilla Web Components without using any component publishing libraries like Stencil, Lit and so on. The reason being I met with some roadblocks in building a drag-n-drop editor using these libraries. Actually the Crayons Team itself is using Stencil to build the Crayons components using TypeScript and React-like component semantics and finally publish them as platform native Web components and React wrappers for the same. You can find out more about this in the Stencil documentation.
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Why we chose WebComponents for our Design System
Stencil
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A Quick Guide to Mitosis: Why You Need It and How You Can Use It
This might sound very similar to the work the Ionic team did with Stencil. The one main difference is that we're not just outputting web components. Rather full framework-ready JavaScript. You can even compile the output to Stencil as well.
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The Case for Web Components
While you can build components directly from the supporting Web APIs, you might find it productive to use a library that's been built to support this task. Lit and StencilJS are two of several libraries with acompanying tooling to help you build web components. And because they compile to the same 'target', they give you an additonal advantage: if you choose to switch web component libraries at some point in the future, you can make the switch for new components without having to rewrite the old ones, and use both in the same application.
mitosis
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Best front-end stack for Golang backend
I discovered https://github.com/BuilderIO/mitosis, and it has changed my front-end development workflow with the ability to create one development and export and test metrics on multiple front-ends delivering the best MVP possible.
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Creating a component library and as both Svelte and Web components
Or, another alternative is Mitosis which compiles your components to the native version for each framework (you can even compile them to Web Components!). I haven’t personally used this, but it does seem to fit your use case.
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Build fullstack resumable web app using Qwikcity and github rest api
Mitosis
- Build framework-agnostic components with Mitosis
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A first look at Bun: is it really 3x faster than Node.js and Deno?
I created a dashboard app in Mitosis (source). It has a full tree of components, business logic, dependencies, uses props and state and other typical React features.
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Frontend Links
View on GitHub
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A Quick Guide to Mitosis: Why You Need It and How You Can Use It
You might be thinking, "What’s the big deal? It’s all just JavaScript anyway." Sure, you’re right, but the real challenge here is when each of these teams need to coexist within a single brand that has a very specific design system. This is where Builder.io's Mitosis can help you create a single source of truth for all of the reusable components within your Design System.
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Builder: Drag and drop page builder and CMS for React, Vue, Angular, and more
They also created Mitosis[1], which compiles JSX to a variety of frameworks, including Svelte. I’d bet a lot of the inverse logic’s pretty similar. I’m a bit surprised Svelte isn’t already supported in Builder.
- Miško Hevery explains fast Qwik JavaScript
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🚀10 Trending projects on GitHub for web developers - 13th August 2021
View on GitHub
What are some alternatives?
lit - Lit is a simple library for building fast, lightweight web components.
Svelte - Cybernetically enhanced web apps
vite-ssg - Static site generation for Vue 3 on Vite
css-modules - Documentation about css-modules
html-figma - Figma to HTML, CSS, React, Vue, and more!
shoelace-css - A collection of professionally designed, every day UI components built on Web standards. Works with all framework as well as regular HTML/CSS/JS. 🥾
partytown - Relocate resource intensive third-party scripts off of the main thread and into a web worker. 🎉
angular-email-editor - Drag-n-Drop Email Editor Component for Angular
tailwind-figma - FlowBite is a free and open-source set of UI components and pages in Figma built for Tailwind CSS
webcomponents - Web Components specifications
turbo - The speed of a single-page web application without having to write any JavaScript
storybook - Storybook is a frontend workshop for building UI components and pages in isolation. Made for UI development, testing, and documentation.