This codebase was created to demonstrate a fully fledged fullstack application built with Golang/Gin including CRUD operations, authentication, routing, pagination, and more.
Vue is a very popular JavaScript front-end framework, one that’s experiencing a huge amount of growth. It is simple, tiny (~24KB), and very performant. It feels different from all the other…
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…
Representational State Transfer (REST) has gained widespread acceptance across the Web as a simpler alternative to SOAP- and Web Services Description Language (WSDL)-based Web services. Key evidence of this shift in interface design is the adoption of REST by mainstream Web 2.0 service providers -- including Yahoo, Google, and Facebook -- who have deprecated or passed on SOAP and WSDL-based interfaces in favor of an easier-to-use, resource-oriented model to expose their services. In this article, Alex Rodriguez introduces you to the basic principles of REST.
I have recently started playing around with PureScript. In this post I want to document some of the learnings I had when writing a first tiny app with PureScript and Pux. As I walk through the code of the app I'll cover the basics of Pux. I will not attempt to provide a full tutorial here, nor will I cover the very basics of PureScript. But I will provide some pointers to useful resources where I found some.
We will be building a user authentication in a single page application with Node, React, Redux and Koa combined with Passport. We will implement local authentication, where users can log in using an email and passport, and authentication with Facebook, which can be used with other social networks and OAuth providers.
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.
If I was going to sum up my experiences with Vue in a sentence, I’d probably say something like "it's just so reasonable" or "It gives me the tools I want when I want them, and never gets in my way". Again and again when learning Vue, I smiled to myself. It just made sense, elegantly. This is my own introductory take on Vue. It's the article I wish I had when I was first learning Vue. If you'd like a more non-partisan approach, please visit Vue's very well thought out and easy to follow Guide.