(Also, if you're not componentizing your UI, why are you wasting so much of your time?) ĪPM: I use for performance monitoring, and for exception tracking. Tailwind would be frustrating to use if you crafted bespoke UI elements on every page, but it's an absolute godsend if you're componentizing all of your UI. UI: I use Tailwind and Tailwind UI, and aggressively componentize the UI with ViewComponent to make it easier and more manageable to build reusable components and to keep from shooting myself in the foot. Using Turbo Streams reminds me a bit of the sort of 'head exploding' moments I had first working with Rails back in 2007 or so. I think the documentation is pretty bad compared to the rest of the Hotwire stack, but-holy moly-once I had it working, it's really like a superpower for front-end development. It took me a little while to really wrap my head around Turbo Streams. I feel real joy not having to use JS for anything though things like liveview/livewire/blazor/dioxus etc really make my life better. Wordpress I did quite a lot with as well but I will never like it it is too messy to be clean and too clean to be a mess it doesn’t fit my way of thinking either way. Still don’t like the language but it’s very productive and robust imho. Mostly because plug-ins and the bizarre amount of capable people willing to help all over the place. I did a large project with a team with laravel the past months and was really surprised how productive it is we did basically the impossible in a very short time. What is bad about laravel for development experience? I don’t like php or js or, dare I say it, ts (I don’t mind the language and like the type system but the tooling is so rotten hope deno will fix things), so I often experiment in projects by taking something else like Phoenix, IHP or Dioxus etc and it’s nice, but you always run into the lack of help when stuck. I agree with you, I guess the ‘even compared’ threw me off laravel is pretty painless imho so maybe it does actually apply? But it is not actually relevant to your comment sorry about that. I know my experience is not what many of you would expect, so therefore thought it was interesting to share it with you.Įdit sorry I misread your comment somehow! I will leave my response anyway. WordPress is so crazy powerfull, that if you want to create some community website, it offers everything you need. So I was able to hire a cheap php WordPress developer who made my custom plugin. I could have written that myself, but then I would lose out on time developing my tool. Of course I needed my own plugin to integrate my app and show shared games. All thanks to the user roles functionality. I also have an external person who writes my newsletters, but isn't allowed push the "publish" button. Needed some faq page with search, needed a captcha for registering, experimented with ads, post updates to discord, user reporting system. I need to send out a newsletter, and most Saas options are crazy expensive: plugin, 1 time payment. I needed a community where my members post updates: BuddyPress Why was WordPress the best choice? Basically everything you need has a plugin. Haxe because it will be easy to port to any device. I run, a web tool to make RPG games without coding (6000+ user published games) The app itself is written in Haxe. You're going to love to hate this: Best choice I made was using WordPress!
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