glamorous is React component styling solved with an elegant (inspired) API, small footprint (<5kb gzipped), and great performance (via glamor). It has a very similar API to styled-components and uses similar tools under the hood (glamor).
Unfortunately Twitter is not ideal for providing context and longer explanation, and I thought this might be a good way to follow up. Given that, a lot of this article describes what led to our…
By adopting inline styles, we can get all of the programmatic affordances of JavaScript. This gives us the benefits of something like a CSS pre-processor (variables, mixins, and functions). It also…
React is incredible because it allows you to build your UI using a declarative API. You tell React what you want the interface to look like, and it handles the rest. As users interact with the…
Components can be tested with snapshot testing. Tools like Jest (often combined with Enzyme) that offer this functionality take a ‘snapshot’ of what your component renders — everything from divs…
This video covers the full installation of Vue and Vuex using the Vue-CLI and creating a project from scratch. This project will create a basic application that presents a problem that Vuex is uniquely qualified to fix. We'll use Vuex store to move information between two components that need to keep sync and are separated by both state and router and use Vuex to solve that problem.
This article is not going to cover what React is or why you should learn it. Instead, this is a practical introduction to the fundamentals of React.js for those who are already familiar with JavaScript and know the basics of the DOM API.
I've created a Polymer element for rendering markdown which uses the marked.js library. I was wondering, what is the recommended way of loading in its dependencies?
I work on a library called Polymer, which helps you write web components faster and easier. This is awesome, but it’s only awesome if you (yes, YOU) know what a web component is, and know that you want to write one. So here’s a story about what these things are and teaches you how to use them without showing you 10 pages of docs and getting you to install tools and CLIs. Maybe it’s for you. Maybe it isn’t. In either case, it has otters.