stylo
tiptap
stylo | tiptap | |
---|---|---|
5 | 81 | |
715 | 23,923 | |
0.0% | 2.0% | |
4.9 | 9.6 | |
about 1 year ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
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.
stylo
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todolist-cl: a nice looking todolist with a web UI, written in Common Lisp [and by a newcomer to CL, to add credit]
I recently integrated Stylo: https://stylojs.com/ It was simple and the editor looks simple, I like it.
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Is there some kind of opensource widget editor? Like an advanced WYSIWYG editor
Stylo
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Switching Rich Text Editors, Part 1: Picking Tiptap
Great article and fantastic choice!
This is a topic I have been very interested lately. I had been lucky to start using since Slate 0.61.x, but I cannot say anything good about it. It has a major problem with managing large documents [0]. I tried to introduce multiple improvements of performance, but it is very ungrateful project – change in one place affects many things at the same time. I am shocked, how many projects are still using it. For example, open-sourced Notabase [1]. My 4+ weeks with Slate.js completely killed motivation, and I was only thinking to put a whole project to litter.
In the result of being unhappy, I switched to Draft.js. It was 2020, and I was eager to try it out, so I did. Sadly, in 2020 there was also the last release [2]. Initially, I didn't like how it works. I preferred the Slate data model. Also, the draft.js project felt not maintained at that time (by looking at commits activity, issues and pull-requests). It is written in the Flow which I detest. I spent few weeks to try "merge" the draft.js and sentry with doing a "rewrite" to TypeScript. Obviously, quickly I realized myself it is stupid idea.
Then, I took a look at ReMirror. Yet another problem that was struggling with maintenance and active contributors. It is based on ProseMirror, so I thought it is better choice than previous. ReMirror is overly complex for simple things. It was hard to find any help - neither by googling examples nor via ReMirror's Discord (it was dead silence there).
After that, I have found information about the TipTap. Back then, there was only provided support for Vue.js. Fortunately, it was that time, when they have promised the v2 with React support. I skipped it to wait for the new version.
Maybe, a raw ProseMirror with React? Yep, tried it, but I wasn't very happy of the result. I knew the TipTap v2 will be released and there were already existing projects that were using ProseMirror behind the scene, for example: Outline's rich-markdown-editor[3]. It has tons of built-in components that I had with Slate. I was extremely happy about it, because "everything what I needed" was there – typical bold, italic, code, code block, quote, multi-level list and even table editing. Really awesome piece of code! However, authors decided they are opting for TipTap and they have archived repository on GitHub, which means officially the project is dead.
I had no time to test Quill.js. It looked interesting, but it has noticeable poor development pace, and it looks a dead project with many bugs.
Currently, I am using the TipTap v2 and I can't say how happy I am now. I guess I will stick with it for longer. However, I know the journey to find the best Rich Text Editor has not ended. There are more alternatives, for example Stylo [4] that I've found in this week.
[0] Try to copy the contents of https://www.slatejs.org/examples/huge-document and paste it back. In a result, my Firefox on Macbook M1 hangs.
[1]: https://notabase.io/
[2]: https://github.com/facebook/draft-js/releases/tag/v0.11.7
[3]: https://github.com/outline/rich-markdown-editor
[4]: https://stylojs.com/
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Looking for suggestions for material themed rich text editors
This one is super hot off the press (literally just announced on Twitter today) and still in alpha, but you might want to check out: https://stylojs.com/ - its lightweight/minimal and uses web components.
- Stylo - A new interactive rich text editor for the web
tiptap
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Encrypted Note Editor App In React Native
The Editor: The core of our app is the editor. We need an easy to use and robust rich text editor, that supports all of the features we want such as: headings, lists, placeholders, markdown, color, images, bold italic etc… For this we will use @10play/tentap-editor which is a rich text editor for react native based on Tiptap.
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WYSIWYG editor for a new Rails project
If you want bell and whistles - https://tiptap.dev/
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Can I create another WordPress that satisfies humanity?
A WYSIWYG rich-text editor using tiptap2 and Element Plus for Vue3
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Ask HN: Which open-source editor would you choose to build something like Notion
You can build a Notion-like editor on top of https://tiptap.dev :-) Here is a demo of what such an editor might look like: https://demos.tiptap.dev/
Since Tiptap is headless, you have the freedom to design and develop the UI exactly the way you want.
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Launch HN: Tiptap (YC S23) – Toolkit for developing collaborative editors
The first link shows a discussion that started in July 2020, when Tiptap was only available in version 1. The new major version 2, which is a complete rewrite, was in development. The biggest drawback the GitLab engineers had was the lack of a test suite in Tiptap 1. That's understandable, because as a key component of your application, testing is necessary to ensure that you catch breakable changes. Tiptap 2 does just that. [1]
[1] https://github.com/ueberdosis/tiptap/tree/develop/tests
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Vrite Editor: Open-Source WYSIWYG Markdown Editor
No good tool is built without using good tools, and Vrite Editor is no different. Before getting into WYSIWYG editors, I extensively researched available RTE frameworks, that could provide the tooling and functionality I was looking for. Ultimately, I picked TipTap and underlying ProseMirror — IMO, the best tools currently available for all kinds of WYSIWYG editors.
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What WYSIWYG editor do you use that has collaborative editing in Go?
Nodejs has hocuspocus (built on prosemirror) (https://www.npmjs.com/package/@hocuspocus/server) using tiptap (https://tiptap.dev/), are there any similar alternative backends in Go?
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Seeking Suggestions for the Best Library to Implement a New Rich Text Editor in React
Check this headless editor framework https://tiptap.dev/
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Sharing your Tailwind Configuration between Monorepo Packages
If you're in need of a solid editor library for your next project, be sure to check out Tiptap. It's an open-source project, and we always appreciate feedback and contributions!
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How I put ChatGPT into a WYSIWYG editor
The buttons had to be absolutely positioned, which required both a custom TipTap extension and tapping deeper into the underlying ProseMirror (both libraries powering the Vrite editor).
What are some alternatives?
quill - Quill is a modern WYSIWYG editor built for compatibility and extensibility.
polkadot-Js-Plus-extension - A user-friendly wallet to interact with the Polkadot/Substrate based blockchains through a browser.
slate - A completely customizable framework for building rich text editors. (Currently in beta.)
react-page - Next-gen, highly customizable content editor for the browser - based on React and written in TypeScript. WYSIWYG on steroids.
lexical - Lexical is an extensible text editor framework that provides excellent reliability, accessibility and performance.
parity-signer - Air-gapped crypto wallet.
Editor.js - A block-style editor with clean JSON output
milkdown - 🍼 Plugin driven WYSIWYG markdown editor framework.
ProseMirror - The ProseMirror WYSIWYM editor
Astar - The dApp hub for blockchains of the future
remirror - ProseMirror toolkit for React 🎉