vanillaview
js-framework-benchmark
vanillaview | js-framework-benchmark | |
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6 | 64 | |
12 | 6,484 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
about 2 years ago | 4 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
vanillaview
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Show HN: Bang
Hello Humans of HN,
This is BANG! a new UI framework for JavaScript on the web. It comes out of work I did in 2014 (on a web component framework with v0 Shadow DOM) and in 2018 (on a pure view-as-a-function of state framework with JavaScript template tag functions, variously known as brutal.js, dumbass and now vanillaview or just VV).
This work unifies those two works, and combines the JavaScript templating and minimal DOM updates (diffs without VDOM, by using granular updating functions down even to the level of splicing text nodes and text in attribute values and names) of VV with the scoped-styles, and component organization of the original unnamed web component framework.
It also adds a few new things, such as fixing some bugs in VV that I didn't even know existed before I tried merging it with another framework, making the list-diffing capability of VV truly minimal (previously it would reprint the whole list if any item order changed, not only items inserted or deleted actually are), and adding support for something I'm very proud of..."custom self-closing tags."
You can't get self-closing custom tags in HTML, because you can't define them. HTML has a limited set (, ,
and the like), but their syntax has always been neat. And React picked up on this as a way to include a component in another. I really liked that syntax. In VV I simply used template slots and function calls to the included view function to include components, it worked. But I always wanted a neater syntax. I experimented with a parser at the time, and that worked, too. But the performance was slow, and I thought it made the code clunky.One day I had the realization I could use HTML comment nodes. They look, "kinda" like elements, and you can write them by omitting everything but the leading ``. This was what I needed. Hence "bang" (at least I think that's where the name comes from, I'm not even sure). So these "bang tags" are self-closing tags, that are automatically converted to regular custom elements. Allowing you to type less.
I build things to improve my developer experience. That's all important. Then you're more efficient, and effective and you enjoy doing it more. So I'm sharing it here because I want to contribute to you, too. Maybe it's something valuable for you, or maybe it gives you ideas. Either way, this framework is yours. It's an open-source permissive license, and yours to contribute to, or fork or whatever.
It's got bugs right now and the syntax is more limited than VV, but I like it better. I wanted something new, and I got it. By making this. I can always add the VV syntax I removed for performance and simplicity during the merge, back later. But I'm not sure if I will, not yet. If you want something more battle-tested take a look at VV[0], but note that some of the fixes I made to the merged-VV have not been included back in main. I'm sure I'm going to do that eventually, but not for a while yet probably. I'm too busy basking in the bliss that is BANG!. Hopefully it's your bliss too :P ;) xx
[0]: https://github.com/i5ik/vanillaview
- Show HN: Vanillaview – Easy to Use Views in JavaScript
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Show HN: Imba – I have spent 7 years creating a programming language for the web
Wow you are clearly a genius. The syntax looks beautiful! This is great. I don't want to use it (the best tool for the job for me is one that fits my own mental models, my own mind, and this is not it) but you are a genius.
Also -- wow those Nordics are super productive programmers/coders/developers/open-sorcerers (Sindre Aarsaether & Sindre Sorhus & Linus Torvalds & ......) -- could it maybe have something to do with: The low GNI, the high HDI and the great weather for coding? (cold, blistery, bleak, focused, electrons-and-light universe is only outlet in a desolate landscape)?
PS - I use my own memoized DOM with minimal/granular updates in my own quirky framework (https://github.com/i5ik/vanillaview)
CONGRATULATIONS, SIR!
- VanillaView is a JavaScript library for building user interfaces
- i5ik/vanillaview VanillaView is a JavaScript library for building user interfaces.
- Show HN: VanillaView – easy to use views with vanilla JavaScript semantics
js-framework-benchmark
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Popularity is not Efficiency: Solid.js vs React.js
JavaScript benchmarks are instruments for measuring the speed and effectiveness with which a JavaScript engine—such as the ones found in web browsers—can complete particular tasks. Benchmarks are used by developers and browser vendors to evaluate various engines, find places in the code where improvements are needed, and make sure JavaScript standards are being followed.
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Use any web browser as GUI, with Zig in the back end and HTML5 in the front end
Strange then that frameworks advertise how fast they are at rendering, mutating, and creating objects in the DOM, and one of the main JS benchmarks everyone likes to measure their performance by is literally a benchmark about DOM manipulation: https://github.com/krausest/js-framework-benchmark
Oh wait. It's not strange. Because state manipulation is a largely solved problem, and even the least performant state manipulation is blazingly fast. However, presenting components in the browser's DOM is tens of magnitudes of orders less performant than anything you can throw at state manipulation.
And every single framework is busy solving one single problem: how do we touch the DOM as little as possible?
- JavaScript-Framework-Benchmark
- GitHub - krausest/js-framework-benchmark: A comparison of the performance of a few popular javascript frameworks
- JavaScript Framework Benchmark
- Vue 3 now outperforms Svelte and React
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Vue 3 is currently performing better than Svelte and React
It literally says at the bottom "Data from https://krausest.github.io/js-framework-benchmark/"
- Cample.js benchmark reactivity without VDOM
- Rust é uma linguagem que embora tenha uma curva de conhecimento considerável, entrega vários benefícios como segurança e produtividade, reduzindo consideravelmente a verbosidade
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Imperative - 1.5kb React alternative using Generators
The standard benchmark for js frameworks would be best: https://github.com/krausest/js-framework-benchmark
What are some alternatives?
pFreak - pFreak is a unit-level 2-in-1 JavaScript benchmarking and testing framework.
mikado - Mikado is the webs fastest template library for building user interfaces.
_____ - 💎 Das Bang-Architektur-Rahmenwerk! ist eine Ansichtsbibliothek, die benutzerdefinierte Elemente für das neue Zeitalter druckt. Es enthält asynchrone Vorlagenwerte, JS-Vorlagensyntax, <!void-elements /> und minimale DOM-Aktualisierungen ohne virtuelles DOM. [Moved to: https://github.com/i5ik/das.bang.froomwerk]
sycamore - A library for creating reactive web apps in Rust and WebAssembly
kotlinx.html - Kotlin DSL for HTML
yew - Rust / Wasm framework for creating reliable and efficient web applications
coffeesense - IntelliSense for CoffeeScript. LSP implementation / VSCode extension
imba - 🐤 The friendly full-stack language
typescript-imba-plugin - Typescript Plugin for providing rich language functionality for Imba
solid - A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.
Svelte - Cybernetically enhanced web apps
solid-heroicons