vue-svelte-size-analysis
prepack
vue-svelte-size-analysis | prepack | |
---|---|---|
18 | 8 | |
300 | 14,385 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | about 2 years ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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vue-svelte-size-analysis
- What things sveltekit offer better than other javascript frameworks?
- The State of JS 2022
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A React Developer's First Take on Solid
but that's not true. see https://krausest.github.io/js-framework-benchmark/current.html. There is also a break-even point in bundle size where svelte gets larger compared to vue. see https://github.com/yyx990803/vue-svelte-size-analysis
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What's next on your JavaScript framework radar for 2023? (Front End)
i did not ignore it. You can read about it here. There is break-even point where svelte falls off compared to vue as the application grows.
- Anyone know what these recent massive spikes in svelte & vue usage are from?
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The new wave of React state management
The first version of React was released on 2013, it took almost 10 years for Suspense to exist (we _just_ got it now with React 18), that's what I'm talking about. Even functional components and hooks took a lot of time from them get and implement the idea after they tried to use ES classes and made everything much harder to manage. Context also isn't perfect, I like it but the redraw performance is not amazing and doesn't scale at all to bigger applications.
> https://github.com/yyx990803/vue-svelte-size-analysis
This is an interesting comparison I haven't seen before, I wonder if it's true for a complete application using some lib for state management, routing, etc. and if this isn't just a kind of cherry picked example. Thanks for showing this though.
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All you need to know about the state of Vue.js in 2022
probably only true for small projects
- Solid.js feels like what I always wanted React to be
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Memoirs of a lone JavaScript developer PART 2 : Svelte. An awful implementation of an old idea.
You are citing this: https://github.com/yyx990803/vue-svelte-size-analysis
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JavaScript Framework TodoMVC Size Comparison
There isn't only the size of the runtime but the size of the component code. Not all components are equal. Templates in each framework compile differently. Evan You, creator of Vue put together a comparison between Svelte and Vue which was pretty illuminating.
prepack
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Ask HN: Interest in a Rust-Inspired Language Compiling to JavaScript?
Hello HN,
I'm considering the development of a new programming language, drawing inspiration from Rust's strengths, with a focus on compiling to JavaScript. Here what I'm considering are some key features:
Strict Type System
Algebraic Data Types
*Unsafe Mode for JS/TS Interaction*: Facilitate direct interaction with existing JavaScript and TypeScript code.
No Null Usage: Option/Result patterns to avoid null.
Trait Implementation
Backend Development Priority: Initially targeting server-side applications.
Efficient Compiler Design: Including features like dead-code elimination and partial evaluation, similar to the approach of Prepack[0] (by Facebook).
I believe this approach could bring significant benefits, especially with recent advancements like Uint8Array and worker threads.
Would this be of interest to the community? Looking forward to your insights and discussion.
[0] https://github.com/facebookarchive/prepack
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Do any engines or optimizers product TS-specific performance gains?
You can still do optimisations based purely on Javascript semantics. This is similar to the first example you give with dead function elimination, and many minifiers do some amount of this already, but you can take it to some extremes. One example of this is the (no longer maintained) Prepack project from Facebook. The core idea is to evaluate as much Javascript as possible at compile time, with the expectation that the result will probably be smaller (albeit less human readable) than the initial code.
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[AskJS] Are there JS minifiers that can compress the code by storing and reusing repeating property/method names and strings?
It's no longer maintained, but I think prepack is roughly what you're looking for.
- Can something like typescript or elm be AOT-compiled efficiently?
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React I Love You, But You're Bringing Me Down
i've had code where it intentionally relied on the wrong behavior (missing hook dependencies) and when I fixed it it caused an unintentional bug (hook fired too often or sometimes infinite rerendering). Yes it is more of a bug in the code rather than React hooks issue but it is also really hard to fix/rewrite. while i'd love to jump on the hype train projects like https://github.com/facebookarchive/prepack and how concurrent mode is still experimental after five+ years doesn't give me a lot of confidence.
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Memoirs of a lone JavaScript developer PART 2 : Svelte. An awful implementation of an old idea.
Some real examples in JavaScript can be seen on Prepack[2]. Consequently it is natural to wonder whether we can AOT compile components of client side frameworks, to achieve a reduction in the final bundle size, but also to increase application execution speed.
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React 18 is now in beta
Less or more itโs likely to happen, and could have been expected 2-3 years ago.
Especially with https://github.com/facebook/prepack. They want to eventually ship pre-compiled components rather than React.createElement() to end user
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Vercel Welcomes Rich Harris, Creator of Svelte
https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/7324
I also think this is why facebook had been investing in `prepack` - https://github.com/facebook/prepack
What are some alternatives?
pinia - ๐ Intuitive, type safe, light and flexible Store for Vue using the composition api with DevTools support
react-18 - Workgroup for React 18 release.
realworld - SvelteKit implementation of the RealWorld app
SvelteKit - web development, streamlined
vue-native-core - Vue Native is a framework to build cross platform native mobile apps using JavaScript
next-runtime - The Next.js Runtime allows Next.js to run on Netlify with zero configuration
devtools - Replay.io DevTools
denoflare - Develop, test, and deploy Cloudflare Workers with Deno.
qwik - Instant-loading web apps, without effort
jsx - The JSX specification is a XML-like syntax extension to ECMAScript.
inertia - Inertia.js lets you quickly build modern single-page React, Vue and Svelte apps using classic server-side routing and controllers.
solid-realworld - A Solid Implementation of the Realworld Example App