react-community-tools-practices-cheatsheet

Descriptions and use cases for common tools and practices in the React community (by markerikson)

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react-community-tools-practices-cheatsheet reviews and mentions

Posts with mentions or reviews of react-community-tools-practices-cheatsheet. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-05-24.
  • State Management in React Applications
    3 projects | /r/reactjs | 24 May 2023
  • How I write React after 8 years
    2 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 27 Jul 2022
    Eh, there was entirely valid reasons for the backlash :)

    Redux _was_ overused in the first couple years. The original patterns _were_ very boilerplate-y. There _are_ a lot of other good tools for varying use cases that overlap with things that people have used Redux for: Context for prop drilling, React Query / Apollo for data fetching, Zustand/Jotai/Mobx/five-million-other-libs for state management.

    Redux will never be the "must use this" lib again the way it was there for a couple years.

    And that's a _good_ thing, because folks should take time to think about what problems they actually need to solve in their apps and pick the tools that work best for those problems.

    But it's also true that Redux _is_ still a useful tool, and that RTK has addressed the pain points in using Redux. So, still very much a viable choice today, and the positive feedback we get on RTK daily shows that.

    Really, the bigger issue today is that a lot of folks don't seem to understand the technical differences, tradeoffs, and intended use cases between a lot of these tools.

    I wrote an extensive post describing the differences between Context and Redux to try to help with that:

    - https://blog.isquaredsoftware.com/2021/01/context-redux-diff...

    I've also been trying to start up a community-driven site to list common tools for various use cases (state management, styling, build tools, data fetching, etc), to act as a resource to help clarify this sort of confusion:

    - https://github.com/markerikson/react-community-tools-practic...

    Sadly I haven't had time to push it forward myself due to all the other responsibilities and tasks on my todo list, but hopefully at some point we can get enough info filled in for it to be a real resources that we can point people to.

  • Redux is Poison
    1 project | /r/reactjs | 17 Jul 2022
    In fact, I am literally trying to put together a community-driven site that would list commonly used tools for use cases like state management and styling, and describe their tradeoffs, specifically because I want people to make informed decisions.
  • UIs are not pure functions of the model
    5 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 4 Jul 2022
    Good question!

    The really short answer is: mostly looking at NPM download stats, Github "depended by" numbers, and random polls on Twitter.

    Which are all _horribly_ flawed metrics, but they're also all we have to go by.

    I wrote a couple longer comments on Reddit a while back that went into more details on some of the numbers and the potential flaws in using them:

    - https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/lcgqnd/state_manag...

    - https://www.reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/skbyb1/the_most_po...

    and unfortunately you asking me about this is tempting me to turn those comments into a blog post with some additional thoughts :)

    I'll definitely agree that Redux usage has peaked in _relative_ terms, although as you can see from the download numbers it seems to still be growing in _absolute_ terms. Also it's entirely possible that fewer new projects are choosing Redux.

    Then again, how do we even count "usage" in the first place? I've seen Web3 app boilerplate repos that include Redux Toolkit. If 1000 people clone that repo and play with it, how do we compare that usage conceptually vs one app using Mobx that's been around for years and has a bunch of developers working on it daily?

    As I've pointed out in a number of podcasts and articles: I'm not trying to convince people they _must_ use Redux, or even that they _should_ use Redux. I just want people to be aware that modern Redux is way easier than legacy Redux, that Redux _is_ still widely used and is a viable choice, and what some of the tradeoffs are when using Redux or any other state management library.

    I've actually been trying to get the community to come together and work on a centralized site that would list tools in different use cases and categories such as state management, styling, data fetching, and build tooling, describe purpose / use cases / tradeoffs for each tool, and have that as a recognized resource for people to use when researching what to use for a project. You can see the original RFC discussion and prototype site here:

    - https://github.com/markerikson/react-community-tools-practic...

    - https://react-community-tools-practices-cheatsheet.netlify.a...

    Sadly I haven't had time to push this forward, and it needs to have more people involved and helping fill out content on the various topics (not just me).

  • Building first React project, and lost on State Management
    1 project | /r/reactjs | 23 May 2022
    Fortunately, we're starting to make some headway on https://github.com/markerikson/react-community-tools-practices-cheatsheet/discussions/1 ! We recently got a PR adding a page covering the three Poimandres libs (Zustand/Jotai/Valtio), someone's filling out pages on styling approaches, etc.
  • Recap from Reactathon, if you missed the conference
    1 project | /r/reactjs | 10 May 2022
    (I will say this is the exact kind of guidance I'd like to have in the "React Community Tools" site I still want to build out as a resource, and I'm hopeful that we can get some content filled out and momentum behind that site later this year.)
  • Should we be teaching Redux in 2022?
    4 projects | /r/reactjs | 12 Feb 2022
    Early last year, I proposed creating a "React Community Tools and Practices" resource site. The idea was to provide curated written guidance on the different tools and techniques that React devs commonly use to solve various problems, describe the purpose and tradeoffs of each tool, and give some general guidance on how to decide on what tool best solves your use case.
  • React State Management
    3 projects | /r/reactjs | 24 Nov 2021
    Background: https://github.com/markerikson/react-community-tools-practices-cheatsheet/discussions/1
  • What are the biggest issues you see with React in its current form?
    2 projects | /r/reactjs | 21 Jul 2021
  • Top libraries to know about
    1 project | /r/reactjs | 6 Mar 2021
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