stimulus-use
A collection of composable behaviors for your Stimulus Controllers (by stimulus-use)
Our great sponsors
stimulus-use | tailwindcss-rails | |
---|---|---|
9 | 20 | |
1,389 | 1,349 | |
2.8% | 2.4% | |
8.7 | 8.3 | |
4 days ago | 8 days ago | |
JavaScript | Ruby | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.
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.
stimulus-use
Posts with mentions or reviews of stimulus-use.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-01-19.
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A powerful search feature with what Rails provides out of the box
You can see that I added a dependency here: stimulus-use.
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Discover Symfony UX’s Twig Components. UI without JS or BS.
“stimulus-use: Add composable behaviors to your Stimulus controllers, like debouncing, detecting outside clicks and many other things.
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RVTWS: a Ruby stack for modern web apps
Actually, Stimulus is pretty cool because you can compose multiple pre-built behaviors into one Stimulus controller, for a sort of functional approach to component behaviors. The tradeoff is that a growing web of Stimulus controllers (plus HTML data attributes associated with them) can become complex and hard to understand.
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Tailwind style CSS transitions with StimulusJS
The stimulus-use project is a collection of reusable behaviors for Stimulus. If you are familiar with React, this project is similar to React’s hooks system, but for Stimulus controllers.
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Pagination and infinite scrolling with Rails and the Hotwire stack
To make using the IntersectionObserver API easier, we will add the wonderful stimulus-use package to our application. This is not a requirement, but it does simplify the code a bit.
- Autocomplete search with Hotwire (zero lines of Stimulus or other JS)
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Upgrade to Stimulus 3, say bye to IE11, and celebrate 🎉
Finally, as we recently added the Stimulus-Use library to our project, we made sure to upgrade it to current beta which supports Stimulus 3.
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Hotwire: best practices for stimulus
As you’ll see below, I am importing useClickOutside from stimulus-use, it’s a great library with small, composable helpers, I urge you to check it out!
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Migrating Selenium system tests to Cuprite
For example, we have a few ”live search“ fields, backed by back-end Fetch requests, on some pages. The live search function was usually triggered by the keyup event and Cuprite was such a fast typewriter that it frequently sent multiple requests almost at once. If some of the responses got a bit late or out of sync, the front-end JavaScript code began hitting issues. We solved this by adopting a technique called debouncing and, frankly, we should have done this since the beginning. By the way, we used the useDebounce module from the marvelous Stimulus-use library to achieve this.
tailwindcss-rails
Posts with mentions or reviews of tailwindcss-rails.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-05-09.
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Is the default importmap method unrealistic in the most popular real world use cases?
You can't use additional CSS packages (like Flowbite) with the official tailwindcss-rails gem. According to this answered issue, you should either give up importmap and use a bundler, or use a CSS file from CDN - which is not ideal (unnecessary classes won't be purged this way).
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How to bundle assets in a Rails engine
You first install your asset handlers as you need them for your project. They can be anything from rails/jsbundling-rails and rails/tailwindcss-rails to webpacker or something custom.
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Setup TailwindCSS, postcss and esbuild on Rails 7
Preconfigured TailwindCSS from TailwindCSS-rails ready to use out of the box, pass --css tailwind as an option.✅
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User notifications with Rails, Noticed, and Hotwire
Thanks to the magic of Rails, the scaffold generator gives us almost everything we need to start creating messages and associating them with users. Because we are using Tailwind via the tailwindcss-rails gem, the scaffold generator also includes some nice looking base styles too.
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Pagination and infinite scrolling with Rails and the Hotwire stack
Because we are using Tailwind via the tailwindcss-rails gem, the scaffold generator applies some basic Tailwind styling to generated views, so we have nice looking Widget pages right out of the box.
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Launching Multiple Processes with a Single Command in Rails
Here's a simple way to achieve this, inspired by the tailwindcss-rails gem.
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How to Install Shoelace with Rails 7, esbuild, and Tailwind JIT
For more documentation on tailwind installation: https://github.com/rails/tailwindcss-rails
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Upgrading from Rails 6.x Webpacker to Rails 7 Importmaps
gem "rails", "~> 7.0.0" # The original asset pipeline for Rails [https://github.com/rails/sprockets-rails] gem "sprockets-rails" # Use postgresql as the database for Active Record gem "pg", "~> 1.1" # Use the Puma web server [https://github.com/puma/puma] gem "puma", "~> 5.0" # Use JavaScript with ESM import maps [https://github.com/rails/importmap-rails] gem "importmap-rails" # Hotwire's SPA-like page accelerator [https://turbo.hotwired.dev] gem "turbo-rails" # Hotwire's modest JavaScript framework [https://stimulus.hotwired.dev] gem "stimulus-rails" # Use Tailwind CSS [https://github.com/rails/tailwindcss-rails] gem "tailwindcss-rails" # Build JSON APIs with ease [https://github.com/rails/jbuilder] gem "jbuilder" gem "redis", "~> 4.0"
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Rails 7 Tailwind Scaffold Question
When you generate an app with rails new --css=tailwind without a JS option, you get the tailwindcss-rails gem which includes the new scaffold generators. When you pass in a JavaScript option as well, you get Tailwind installed via cssbundling-rails, which does not include built-in generators since it offers more than just Tailwind as an option.
- Tailwind-styled scaffold templates when using tailwindcss-rails
What are some alternatives?
When comparing stimulus-use and tailwindcss-rails you can also consider the following projects:
Capybara - Acceptance test framework for web applications
cssbundling-rails - Bundle and process CSS in Rails with Tailwind, PostCSS, and Sass via Node.js.
dropzone - Dropzone is an easy to use drag'n'drop library. It supports image previews and shows nice progress bars.
Pagy - 🏆 The Best Pagination Ruby Gem 🥇
hotwire-example-template - A collection of branches that transmit HTML over the wire.
Foreman - Manage Procfile-based applications
cuprite - Headless Chrome/Chromium driver for Capybara
sprockets-rails - Sprockets Rails integration
cssui - A collection of interactive UI components in pure CSS
flutter-roadmap - Roadmap for Flutter developers in 2020
ferrum - Headless Chrome Ruby API
stimulus-use vs Capybara
tailwindcss-rails vs cssbundling-rails
stimulus-use vs dropzone
tailwindcss-rails vs Pagy
stimulus-use vs hotwire-example-template
tailwindcss-rails vs Foreman
stimulus-use vs cuprite
tailwindcss-rails vs sprockets-rails
stimulus-use vs cssui
tailwindcss-rails vs flutter-roadmap
stimulus-use vs ferrum
tailwindcss-rails vs hotwire-example-template