This article uses #React as it's main example, but it applies to #Laravel, #Tailwind, even #Drupal just a much. I say that as a recovering Drupal dev who used to use the standardization argument.
Greedy management is the reason we can't have nice things.
@Crell Yes! “Tech management will sacrifice technological progress – performance, design, and general product effectiveness – if it disempowers labour.”
@assertchris I believe the core point that what wins is what most commoditizes cheap labor, regardless of its technical quality, is valid, and the examples cited fit that point.
I admittedly can speak more of Laravel and Drupal personally. "Make amateurs able to do things halfway decent without knowing what they're doing" is a core design principle of both systems. Which in turn drives down labor costs and quality.
Excited to share tailwindcss-fluid-font-size, a new fluid typography Tailwind plugin.
I’ve been iterating on Tailwind approaches to fluid typography for a couple years. tailwindcss-fluid-font-size is more flexible and, to me, the most ergonomic and idiomatically “Tailwindy” of the solutions I’ve built or read about.
Open minded Tailwind haters might even be interested in at least the design.
#nuejs looks way too ambitious to be taken seriously. I might be absolutely wrong tho. Also why does the creator keeps calling it "Perfect web framework" ? There is no such thing as "perfect" and you shouldn't resort to such "marketing" gimmick when you called out #tailwind for misleading marketing (still hate tailwind anyway)
@nrk9819 "perfect" lol. Yeah everything is a trade off. You know what's minimal and fast? PHP and jQuery. I'm just waiting for people to start touting that as the new idea
Been slowly tinkering on a Litestar app I'm building just for the hell of it. My local amateur soccer league could really use a website, and I could also stand to learn a new web framework. (I mean, why not?)
While I've been plugging away at it (over-engineering and all), I decided to continue building in public.
Lots of fun stuff in here, but a pretty good "real world" use case for the PyHAT stack (htmx/Tailwind).
Got annoyed trying to get the layout and design of a document correct in word processing programs (and it would ultimately be a #PDF when I saved / exported it) so I decided to just write it in #HTML and #Tailwind#CSS and then use the browser's print to PDF functionality instead and it worked a treat.