Echo JS 0.11.0

<~>

tracker1 comments

tracker1 12 hours ago. link 1 point
It's not just for JS/TS, but since there are client libraries that support JS/TS with this, I figured I'd post here since I think it could be really useful.

Slightly disappointed there's no Deno library, or that the published library doesn't support all three.
tracker1 8 days ago. link 2 points
That's my concern as well.. FWIW, you can dynamically set the content in most UI frameworks for the raw SVG content, which can use CSS properties for attribute usage beyond a single color... so you could use var(--brand-color) and match against body.dark or body.light for adjusting an accent color as well.

Assuming your light/dark integration changes the html or body element as appropriate, most will/do just that.  I will generally detect for localStorage falling back to native preference, then set the html element appropriately as well as integration with my UI toolkit as such.  I do similar for handling various side-menu states combined with breakpoint integrations.
tracker1 13 days ago. link 2 points
That's literally a placeholder though...  Which is fine, I was just mentioning it.
tracker1 14 days ago. link 1 point
If you have the "real" content, then why would you need a skeleton?  I get that it uses the DOM values... but you'd need to have a placeholder for say "Last, First" or "123 any street" while the real data is loading, one would assume while the real data is loaded... that's the point of skeletons, generally speaking.
tracker1 14 days ago. link 2 points
Kinda cool.. but you need to have placeholder values while loading, as well as assuming you aren't using a UI toolkit that already includes a skeleton component wrapper.
tracker1 14 days ago. link 2 points
I blocked the site... I think this is the second or third such post for an online only tool from/for this site.
tracker1 17 days ago. link 1 point
Interesting... though it seems like this and pixi.js are pretty large in terms of npm payload... the demo itself seems a little bit smaller, but still really large for what it is.
[more]