SvelteKit
hotwire-rails
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SvelteKit | hotwire-rails | |
---|---|---|
611 | 98 | |
17,636 | 960 | |
1.9% | - | |
9.8 | 3.2 | |
4 days ago | over 2 years ago | |
JavaScript | Ruby | |
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
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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…
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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.
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Image Generator with Cloudflare
Svelte kit
- Cannot CRUD cookies in SvelteKit from another port
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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.
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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.
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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/
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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.
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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?
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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!
hotwire-rails
- It's not Ruby that's slow, it's your database
- Howire Not Working after deploying to Heroku
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What's New in Rails 7
Applications generated with Rails 7 will get Turbo and Stimulus (from Hotwire) by default, instead of Turbolinks and UJS. Hotwire is a new approach that delivers fast updates to the DOM by sending HTML over the wire.
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Ask HN: What tech stack would you use to build a new web app today?
For Ajax-y stuff, I am really excited by the new crop of "HTML-as-a-Service" or "HTML-over-the-wire."
https://htmx.org/
https://hotwired.dev/
- Ask HN: Do we need JavaScript web frameworks?
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anyone have full tutorial how to upgrade from rails 6.1 to rails 7 ?
For all the turbo/stimulus/hotwire mix, you want to add a new feature just for the sake of adding it? or do you have a use case that fits the feature? if you have then you probably already have an implementation with a different technology (stimulus reflex? some custom websockets or ajax implementation? something with anycable?) and you have to check how to migrate from that technology to hotwire. If you just want to use the feature with no real need for it to practice then just pick any tutorial from the internet (like the intro in the official website https://hotwired.dev).
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Ask HN: What are you favorite goto frameworks when writing Web Aplications
I was recently interested in similar topic. Here are 3 similar solutions I found:
* https://htmx.org/
* https://unpoly.com/
* https://hotwired.dev/
My personal preference is Unpoly (the idea of "layers" is awesome). But the best explanation of concept as a whole (HATEOAS, keeping app state on server using partial page updates, etc) is at HTMX homepage, and in these essays:
* https://htmx.org/essays/hateoas/
* https://htmx.org/essays/locality-of-behaviour/
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Hotwire isn't only for Rails
At the end of 2020 the Basecamp team released a collection of Javascript libraries called Hotwire. Modern web stacks have popularized javascript-rendered front ends and JSON transmissions. Hotwire's primary motivation is to reduce the Javascript footprint and allow application front ends to be created in primarily HTML. It pairs very nicely with the Ruby on Rails ideology and is often demonstrated in that context. I aim to write a series on how Hotwire can be used in any application to simplify development and reduce the need for heavy Javascript downloads. Hotwire currently consists of two javascript libraries: Turbo and Stimulus. The first part of this series introduces Turbo.
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How do you handle views?
I've been doing that a while until I just got sock of the JS spagetti and often duplicated code and went full on Angular CSR and never looked back. That being said, I've been seeing a lot recently about Laravel's Livewire and Symfony and Ruby on Rail's integration with Hotwire (stimulus+turbo).
- Why learn Rails as a frontender?
What are some alternatives?
Next.js - The React Framework
htmx - </> htmx - high power tools for HTML
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]
Alpine.js - A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.
Express - Fast, unopinionated, minimalist web framework for node.
Svelte - Cybernetically enhanced web apps
astro - The web framework for content-driven websites. ⭐️ Star to support our work!
phoenix_live_view - Rich, real-time user experiences with server-rendered HTML
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
inertia-laravel - The Laravel adapter for Inertia.js.
stimulus_reflex - Build reactive applications with the Rails tooling you already know and love.