SvelteKit
Gridsome
Our great sponsors
SvelteKit | Gridsome | |
---|---|---|
611 | 37 | |
17,636 | 8,525 | |
1.9% | 0.2% | |
9.8 | 0.0 | |
7 days ago | 15 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
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.
SvelteKit
-
ChatCrafters - Chat with AI powered personas
Svelte Kit for the fullstack framework It has first class support for Cloudflare Pages Svelte is a very elegant framework, and Svelte Kit is a very good meta-framework for Svelte. Svelte was probably the reason that…
-
Fun, Beautiful, Printable 'Story Cards' for Kids with Cloudflare AI
This AI-powered Story Card Maker is built as a SvelteKit application with Typescript. Using Flowbite Svelte component library, the whole application was laid out. The layout for the Story Card (emulating the size of a postcard - 4" x 3") is created as an HTML Canvas using Fabric.js.
-
Image Generator with Cloudflare
Svelte kit
- Cannot CRUD cookies in SvelteKit from another port
-
The State of Angular SSR Deployment in 2024
These adapters, for example, were built by the community: https://github.com/sveltejs/kit/tree/master/packages/adapter-vercel https://github.com/nuxt/vercel-builder If somebody builds a working one for Angular Universal, we will gladly add it to our Framework Presets → https://vercel.com/docs/concepts/deployments/build-step#framework-preset.
-
AI for Web Devs: Deploying Your AI App to Production
UPDATE: If you liked this project and are curious to see what it might look like as a SvelteKit app, check out this blog post by Tim Smith where he converts this existing app over.
-
Ask HN: Looking for lightweight personal blogging platform
I've played around with several platforms in the last year or so. I've landed on the following setup that works very well for me and ticks all your boxes:
A SvelteKit[0] app hosted on Cloudflare pages. The repo is hosted on GitHub and hooked up to the Cloudflare Pages app [1]. On PRs, I get preview environments. On merge, the changes get deployed to my "production" website. I write blog posts and other content in markdown, which is then processed by mdsvex[2] with very minimal setup.
Mostly, my requirements were more focused around getting the actual framework, hosting, etc. out of my way so that I could focus on writing. Gatsby and Next.js were too configuration heavy and turned me off once I scratched beyond the surface.
[0] https://kit.svelte.dev/
-
Mini site for recommending songs using Svelte & Deno
Behind the scenes is a simple Sveltekit-powered server function to fetch a Spotify client token then find a user's recommendation playlist and its track information. A Deno edge function to performs this data fetch and renders server-side Svelte.
-
Removing React is just weakness leaving your codebase
It’s 2024, and you are about to start a new project. Do you reach for React, a framework you know and love or do you look at one of the other hot new frameworks like Astro, Enhance, 11ty, SvelteKit or gasp, plain vanilla Web Components?
-
CryptoFlow: Building a secure and scalable system with Axum and SvelteKit - Part 5
From part 0 to part 4, we built out CryptoFlow's backend service. Though we can quickly use Postman, VS Code's ThunderClient or automated tests to see the endpoints working easily, this isn't all we want. We want to actively interact with the backend service via some intuitive user interface. Also, a layman wouldn't be able to "consume" the service we've built in the last parts. This article introduces building out the user interface of the system. We will be using SvelteKit, a framework that streamlines web development, and TailwindCSS, the utility-first CSS framework. Let's dig in!
Gridsome
-
My Sixth Year as a Bootstrapped Founder
Thanks for reading!
The web tech stack is actually one of my biggest regrets. It's a static site generator called Gridsome[0] that the maintainers abandoned about three months after I used it to launch the TinyPilot website.
At the time I made the TinyPilot site, I was very excited about Vue, so a Vue-based SSG seemed great. Since then, I've come to find SPAs and most frontend frameworks to be way too much complexity, so I've moved away from Vue, but the TinyPilot website is still stuck on Vue 2.x and bootstrap-vue (which is tied to Vue 2 and Bootstrap 4).
So, it keeps creaking along, but building the 100ish pages on the site takes about five minutes, whereas I think something like Hugo could probably do it in a few seconds. Plus, we get random runtime errors[1] that are pretty hard to debug.
[0] https://gridsome.org/
[1] https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt/issues/5800
-
How To Choose the Best Static Site Generator and Deploy it to Kinsta for Free
Nuxt.js and Gridsome are tailor-made for Vue.js developers.
-
Top ten popular static site generators (SSG) in 2023
Gridsome — Jamstack SSG tool for Vue developers
-
Will anyone hire a 33 yo newbie?
Node is basically back-end Javascript. While powerful alone, almost exclusively you will use a back-end framework like Next.js or Gatsby when using React, and then maybe Nuxt or Gridsome in Vue.
-
Migration from Gridsome to Astro
Among other thoughts, I considered a possibility of migration to a newer tech stack (because I can). Don't get me wrong, I actually love Gridsome (which is underneath my website now). But it's quite obsolete, and it's actually a dead project now.
-
Do you use Vue for smaller static sites?
One downside of Gridsome is that development seems to have stopped if you look at their github. For that reason I've recently switched my Gridsome clients to Nuxt
-
What is a valid alternative to Gatbsybased on VUE.Js for small website like a Portfolio?
I definitely think Nuxt is worth learning for more than just a static site. However, there is a Gatsby-like Vue framework that focuses on SSG: https://gridsome.org/
-
Top 10+ most dead-easy ways to make a web app
Gridsome
-
TezJS: Say Hello to Website Premix Framework
All the Static Site Generators have been in the market for many years. With time, they get new improvements and upgrades as well. While considering SSG frameworks, like Gatsby, Nuxt, Gridsome, Next, and many more have been on the developer’s list for a long time. But when we talk about blazing fast web performance as per core web vital, then we have to do a lot of work in the available frameworks, after connecting a lot of dots (in terms of web performance), but still, we cannot achieve the web performance as per our need if we consider a use case of a large website where 20+ components are in one page.
- There is framework for everything.
What are some alternatives?
Next.js - The React Framework
astro - The web framework for content-driven websites. ⭐️ Star to support our work!
Nuxt.js - Nuxt is an intuitive and extendable way to create type-safe, performant and production-grade full-stack web apps and websites with Vue 3. [Moved to: https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt]
tinacms - A fully open-source headless CMS that supports Markdown and Visual Editing
Express - Fast, unopinionated, minimalist web framework for node.
Strapi - 🚀 Strapi is the leading open-source headless CMS. It’s 100% JavaScript/TypeScript, fully customizable and developer-first.
Gatsby - The best React-based framework with performance, scalability and security built in.
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
firecms - Awesome Firebase/Firestore-based CMS. The missing admin panel for your Firebase project!
Svelte - Cybernetically enhanced web apps
apollo - 🚀 Apollo/GraphQL integration for VueJS