visx
lit
visx | lit | |
---|---|---|
51 | 141 | |
18,746 | 17,575 | |
0.7% | 1.1% | |
7.1 | 9.4 | |
22 days ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
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visx
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React Component Libraries
Official Website: https://airbnb.io/visx/
- Show HN: Matrices – explore, visualize, and share large datasets
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The top 11 React chart libraries for data visualization
Website: Visx GitHub Page
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Level Up Your Web App with Stunning React Charts: Introducing the Top 10 React Charts Libraries
Visx is a React-based library used for constructing data visualizations. It comprises a set of reusable, low-level visualization components that merge the power of D3 for data transformation and calculations with the benefits of React for updating the DOM.
- Visx – a collection of expressive, low-level visualization primitives for React
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What are some of the best libraries you cannot work without?
Lol we migrated away from Nivo to Visx. Nivo is pretty cool but we're big fans of Visx due to how composable it is.
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TypeScript, VisX
You could probably use this as a starting point to anchor it - there's a CodeSandbox link (which is a bit busted due to react-spring though) and I think you may just need to change the direction to "column."
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Any libraries out there that you recommend for charts/graphs/trees in React?
Best one for React is VISX which is built on top of D3.js.
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Data Visualization Framework for React, Angular, Svelte, TypeScript, JavaScript
If you work in React and like this approach it's hard to go past Visx - https://airbnb.io/visx
- Airbnb Visualization Components
lit
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I've created yet another JavaScript framework
That is the reason why I experiment with the TiniJS framework for a while. It is a collection of tools for developing web/desktop/mobile apps using the native Web Component technology, based on the Lit library. Thank you the Lit team for creating a great tool assists us working with standard Web Component easier.
- Web Components e a minha opinião sobre o futuro das libs front-end
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Show HN: I made a Pinterest clone using SigLIP image embeddings
https://github.com/lit/lit/tree/main/packages/labs/virtualiz...
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What We Need Instead of "Web Components"
actually, looking at it (https://lit.dev/), i do exactly that.
I also define a `render()` and extend my own parent, which does a `replaceChildren()` with the render. And, strangely, I also call the processor `html`
I'll still stick with mine however, my 'framework' is half-page of code. I dislike dependencies greatly. I'd need to be saving thousand+ lines at least.
Here, I don't want a build system to make a website; that's mad. So I don't want lit. I want the 5 lines it takes to invoke a dom parser, and the 5 lines it takes do define a webcomp parent.
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Web Components Aren't Framework Components
I rather like https://lit.dev/ for web components so far.
For the reactivity stuff, you might want to read https://frontendmasters.com/blog/vanilla-javascript-reactivi... - it shows a bunch of no-library-required patterns that, while in a number of cases I'd much rather use a library myself, all seems at least -basically- reasonable to me and will probably be far more comprehensible to you than whatever I'd reach for, and frameworks are always much more pleasant to approach after you've already done a bunch of stuff by banging rocks together first.
- Reddit just completed their migration out of React
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Web Components Eliminate JavaScript Framework Lock-In
I work on Lit, which I would hesitate to call a framework, but gives a framework-like DX for building web components, while trying to keep opinions to a minimum and lock-in as low as possible.
It's got reactivity, declarative templates, great performance, SSR, TypeScript support, native CSS encapsulation, context, tasks, and more.
It's used to build Material Design, settings and devtools UIs for Chrome, some UI for Firefox, Reddit, Photoshop Web...
https://lit.dev if you're interested.
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HTML Web Components
I am more a fan of the augmented style because it doesn't entrap you in dev lock-in to platforms.
The problem with frameworks, especially web frameworks, is they reimplement many items that are standard now (shadowdom, components, storage, templating, base libraries, class/async, network/realtime etc).
If you like the component style of other frameworks but want to use Web Components, Google Lit is quite nice.
Google Lit is like a combination of HTML Web Components and React/Vue style components. The great part is it is build on Web Components underneath.
[1] https://lit.dev/
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Web Components Will Outlive Your JavaScript Framework
From the comments I see here, it seems like people expect the Webcomponents API to be a complete replacement for a JS framework. The thing is, our frameworks should start making use of modern web APIs, so the frameworks will have to do less themselves, so can be smaller. Lit [0] for example is doing this. Using Lit is very similar to using React. Some things work different, and you have to get used to some web component specific things, but once you get it, I think it's way more pleasant to work with than React. It feels more natural, native, less framework-specific.
For state management, I created LitState [1], a tiny library (really only 258 lines), which integrates nicely with Lit, and which makes state management between multiple components very easy. It's much easier than the Redux/flux workflows found in React.
So my experience with this is that it's much nicer to work with, and that the libraries are way smaller.
[0] https://lit.dev/
- Lit – a small responsive CSS framework
What are some alternatives?
d3 - Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. :bar_chart::chart_with_upwards_trend::tada:
Svelte - Cybernetically enhanced web apps
recharts - Redefined chart library built with React and D3
stencil - A toolchain for building scalable, enterprise-ready component systems on top of TypeScript and Web Component standards. Stencil components can be distributed natively to React, Angular, Vue, and traditional web developers from a single, framework-agnostic codebase.
nivo - nivo provides a rich set of dataviz components, built on top of the awesome d3 and React libraries
Vue.js - This is the repo for Vue 2. For Vue 3, go to https://github.com/vuejs/core
ngx-charts - :bar_chart: Declarative Charting Framework for Angular
Angular - Deliver web apps with confidence 🚀
react-vis - Data Visualization Components
htmx - </> htmx - high power tools for HTML
react-chartjs-2 - React components for Chart.js, the most popular charting library
Preact - ⚛️ Fast 3kB React alternative with the same modern API. Components & Virtual DOM.