uncss
emotion
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uncss | emotion | |
---|---|---|
5 | 52 | |
9,388 | 17,175 | |
0.2% | 0.6% | |
5.3 | 5.9 | |
24 days ago | 21 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.
uncss
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Optimize CSS with SAT Solving
Check out: https://github.com/uncss/uncss
I've only used it once but it did the job (NOTE: Plain HTML, plain CSS, no build pipeline. So YMMV)
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PurgeCSS & styled-components: Does It Work?
PurgeCSS analyzes your HTML and internally keeps track of which selectors are being used or not. PurgeCSS actually analyzes other types of files besides HTML for selectors, such as template files and JavaScript. This feature is what makes PurgeCSS different from a similar solution, UnCSS, and related to a 'predecessor' solution called PurifyCSS. More on both of those later on.
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Lessons learned from building landing pages
In the process of trying to figure out how to remove the unused code, I found out about UnCSS, a tool that removes unused CSS from your stylesheets. It can be installed by running:
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Any tool the will scan HTML and css and show unused css rules?
Also UnCSS.
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remove unwanted css using post css
https://github.com/uncss/uncss https://shorturl.at/yzSVX https://uncss-online.com/
emotion
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Creating Nx Workspace with Eslint, Prettier and Husky Configuration
emotion [ https://emotion.sh ]
- Why is does modern HTML/CSS seem so complex and convoluted? (details in comment)
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How are folks feeling about the React team's push toward server components?
dang, I never thought about this implication, and I googled the emotionjs repo there's a currently-active open issue regarding this https://github.com/emotion-js/emotion/issues/2928
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I created a Zero-Runtime CSS-in-JS Library Compatible with Next.js App Router and RSC
Over my years of working with React, I’ve loved using CSS-in-JS libraries like Emotion and Styled-components. However, their inherent performance overhead from injecting CSS at runtime and their incompatibility with the latest Next.js features such as App Router and React Server Components (RSC) have always been a nagging issue for me.
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Next.js App Directory Architecture First Impressions
An early difficulty I encountered was using UI component libraries like Mantine and Material UI in the new architecture. After looking through some GitHub issues, the culprit is Emotion, a package many component libraries rely on that does not support server rendering.
- How are you styling in NextJS?
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CSS Style Guide for Web Dev?
In general I recommend using styled-components or emotion. These directly attach CSS to your components in a scoped way so that your CSS files aren’t stepping on each other’s toes all the time and make sure styling is colocated with the component.
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Server Components
I ran into this problem as well. The root cause as I understand it is emotion: https://github.com/emotion-js/emotion/issues/2928
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CSS In JS - The what, why and How's
While integrating component libraries, they may not give you full control over the order in which styles are inserted. (Example issue).
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Lets create something neat together!
Vanilla Extract (CSS Framework) (Alternative: Emotion)
What are some alternatives?
purgecss - Remove unused CSS
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
JSS - JSS is an authoring tool for CSS which uses JavaScript as a host language.
Bulma - Modern CSS framework based on Flexbox
styled-components - Visual primitives for the component age. Use the best bits of ES6 and CSS to style your apps without stress đź’…
purifycss - Remove unused CSS. Also works with single-page apps.
styled-jsx - Full CSS support for JSX without compromises
stellar-photos - Beautiful hi-res photos in your browser tabs - Available for the desktop versions of Chrome, Firefox, Microsoft Edge, Opera, Vivaldi, Brave, and other Chromium browsers.
linaria - Zero-runtime CSS in JS library
Sass - Sass makes CSS fun!