I fear that a LOT of people are going to start using #HTMX for the same reason they use #TailwindCSS; it saves them from having to learn a language they don't like. #javaScript#css
The most tiresome thing in #webdev is picking the techstack. So many choices to make: plain #javascipt or a more restricive language like #typescript , which ofc is often depending on the overall frontend framework to use: #svelte , #react , #preact , #solidjs ?
Or do one completly deviate from the classical way and use rather a techstack via #wasm , such as #rust with #dioxus ?
So many questions to answer and that still is only the js side of things, you then have to think about your css framework (if you want to use something like #tailwindcss ), your font choices, and ofc if and what styling library you actually use ontop of our frontend framework; e.g. #bootstrap , #blueprintjs , #tabler.io and so on.... which also often depends on your framework of choice!
"HyperUI è una raccolta di componenti CSS Tailwind che possono essere utilizzati nel vostro prossimo progetto. Con questa serie di componenti, potrete costruire il vostro prossimo sito web di marketing, la vostra dashboard di amministrazione, il vostro negozio di e-commerce e molto altro ancora."
Finally I switch to #vscode for developing front end work. It's super useful to see the converted class for #tailwindcss (I'm a beginner). I know there is lsp-tailwind, but I use eglot, and it cannot have multiple lsp server in one major mode yet.
I regrettably was unable to attend the second day of #nbpy and am sad to have missed it, but I thoroughly enjoyed my first day there.
My talk "Back to the Future of Hypermedia in Python" is now online. I provide an overview into a hypermedia-driven web application and introduce the PyHAT stack (python hypermedia tailwind).
I honestly use #tailwindcss because I started out with HTML and CSS after the year 2000, and honestly today neither HTML nor CSS have a documentation that like the one offered by Tailwind lets me get to the doing part immediately.
My portfolio got a visual and functional refresh during our recent workation in Denmark. Looking at it now, I feel excited to make this the home for all my educational content going forward.
I might have to take the timestamps off until then.
I realised it has taken about 8 years to finally find a tech stack that I am settled on and happy with so that I am not looking around and wondering if there is something better.
「 I had "separated my concerns", but there was still a very obvious coupling between my CSS and my HTML. Most of the time my CSS was like a mirror for my markup; perfectly reflecting my HTML structure with nested CSS selectors.
My markup wasn't concerned with styling decisions, but my CSS was very concerned with my markup structure.
Maybe my concerns weren't so separated after all 」
— Adam Wathan
Hey devs, I am working on a project that requires restricting a #fastapi API from public access, but data generated from API needs to be made available to clients. So, came up with this workflow, what do you all suggest?