Manupa (@manupadev) 's Twitter Profile
Manupa

@manupadev

Co-founder CTO @stemlinkonline | Fullstack Developer | Technical Consultant | Typescript ReactJS NextJS

ID: 1555352724862304261

linkhttps://manupa.dev/ calendar_today05-08-2022 00:39:33

1,1K Tweet

938 Followers

344 Following

Scott Herrington (@scotth_designer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Great read by Manupa for designers, curious about the work that goes into building flexible, accessible components, like those in ⁦shadcn⁩ ui. Broken down brilliantly with some gd vocab e.g “style” vs “structure n behaviour” layers. manupa.dev/blog/anatomy-o…

Adam Rackis (@adamrackis) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Next is an absolute dream, amazing framework—if you’re building an eCommerce site, blog, etc. For web apps … it’s _still_ outstanding, assuming react-query is there to help. React working with libraries like RQ benefits both sides 🤝

Rich Harris (@rich_harris) 's Twitter Profile Photo

after all these years svelte continues to be the most _interesting_ framework, by a considerable margin, and the one with the lowest negative sentiment never want to rest on our laurels but we are clearly doing something right!

after all these years svelte continues to be the most _interesting_ framework, by a considerable margin, and the one with the lowest negative sentiment

never want to rest on our laurels but we are clearly doing something right!
Rich Harris (@rich_harris) 's Twitter Profile Photo

one interesting nugget: every single metaframework's 'retention' score fell from 2022 — even Astro, which pipped SvelteKit to the top spot (congrats friends!). lots of plausible explanations but it feels like none of us are quite meeting people's expectations. work to be done.

one interesting nugget: every single metaframework's 'retention' score fell from 2022 — even Astro, which pipped SvelteKit to the top spot (congrats friends!). lots of plausible explanations but it feels like none of us are quite meeting people's expectations. work to be done.
Theo - t3.gg (@theo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Love Tailwind, but I don't want it in the browser. - Tailwind's CSS is already quite small - Tailwind is still a changing "standard", the creators shouldn't be locked into browser specs - Competition is growing, this would pick a winner

Tanner Linsley (@tannerlinsley) 's Twitter Profile Photo

To sum up, React Server Components are actually extremely simple and cool in practice. They are "just react components" that are crossing the server/client threshold in an invisible and seamless way. I think this is why they are 100% worth investing in long term. However, they

Manupa (@manupadev) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Help with multiple prisma clients in a turbo monorepo With the original Prisma setup in my production turborepo with 2 nextjs projects I, ran into an issue where after postinstall prisma generate overwrote each other iniside the node_modules . Therefore I found my exact

Wes Bos (@wesbos) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Beautiful new Stripe dev site. Built with Next.js! FORGET ABOUT REMIX SELL SELL SELL Seems like it's entirely pages router + SSG (static site gen) Hosted on Vercel

Beautiful new Stripe dev site. 

Built with Next.js! FORGET ABOUT REMIX SELL SELL SELL

Seems like it's entirely pages router + SSG (static site gen)

Hosted on Vercel
Igor Gassmann (@i_gassmann) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Minh-Phuc Tran Ryan Brown v0 shadcn This is why you have fully featured, styled, and copy-pastable solutions that are built on top of those unstyled component libraries. For example, Tailwind Catalyst, React Aria Components, and shadcn/ui. They allow you to start quickly and focus on the core problem you're solving

Guillermo Rauch (@rauchg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

RSC is a serialization protocol for UI. The most salient and well-understood feature being that it can encode <Components />. But you can also use with `Promise`s of data, which crucially get streamed on the first roundtrip. What a time to be alive.