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Accessible Animations in React The “prefers-reduced-motion” Hook Filed underReactoninMay 4th, 2020.May 2020.Last updatedoninMarch 5th, 2025.Mar 2025. IntroductionLong-time readers of this site have probably picked up that I am a big fan of animations. When used properly, I believe they add a ton of value to the user experience. That said, it's important to be mindful of the fact that not everybody
A deep dive into why Crank.js was created, exploring the limitations of React’s Suspense API and the philosophy behind using generators and async functions for components. After months of development, I’m happy to introduce Crank.js, a new framework for creating JSX-driven components with functions, promises and generators. And I know what you’re thinking: oh no, not another web framework. There a
react-query v1.0 was released on 26 February, which brought about a change in the react-query API and all-new dedicated devtools. In this post, I will be discussing the following changes on: Query keys and query functions useQuery Hook The new queries operation handler, queryCache react-query-devtools A comprehensive list of the updates (mostly minor changes) can be found on the changelog. Moving
We are excited today to introduce Next.js 9.2, featuring: Built-In CSS Support for Global Stylesheets: Applications can now directly import .css files as global stylesheets. Built-In CSS Module Support for Component-Level Styles: Leveraging the .module.css convention, locally scoped CSS can be imported and used anywhere in your application. Improved Code-Splitting Strategy: The Google Chrome team
Next.js 9 was released six (6) months ago, followed by Next.js 9.1 three (3) months ago. These two releases added very powerful new features to Next.js, without increasing our baseline client runtime size. Since then, we've focused heavily on refining and improving the framework as a whole: 9.1.1, 9.1.2, 9.1.3, 9.1.4, 9.1.5, 9.1.6, and 9.1.7. Let's dive into what these releases have improved! 3% -
We are going to rewrite React from scratch. Step by step. Following the architecture from the real React code but without all the optimizations and non-essential features. If you’ve read any of my previous “build your own React” posts, the difference is that this post is based on React 16.8, so we can now use hooks and drop all the code related to classes. You can find the history with the old blo
We're delighted today to introduce the new Create Next App. Create Next App sets up a modern React application powered by Next.js in one command. To get started all you have to do is run: Create Next App has been rebuilt from the ground up to provide the best possible developer experience: Interactive Experience: Running npx create-next-app (with no arguments) now launches an interactive experienc
Having used Vue at work, I had a fairly solid understanding of it. I had, however, been curious to know what the grass was like on the other side of the fence — the grass in this scenario being React. Note: there is a new version of this article that can be found here: https://sunilsandhu.com/posts/i-created-the-exact-same-app-in-react-and-vue-2020-edition I’d read the React docs and watched a few
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