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Vite (French:, like "veet") is a local development server written by Evan You, [1] the creator of Vue.js, and used by default by Vue and for React project templates. It has support for TypeScript and JSX. It uses Rollup and esbuild internally for bundling. [2]
Nuxt is a free and open source JavaScript library based on Vue.js, Nitro, and Vite. Nuxt is inspired by Next.js, [4] which is a framework of similar purpose, based on React.js. The framework is advertised as a "Meta-framework for universal applications".
The introduction of React Hooks with React 16.8 in February 2019 allowed developers to manage state and lifecycle behaviors within functional components, reducing the reliance on class components. This trend aligns with the broader industry movement towards functional programming and modular design.
Project IDX is an online integrated development environment (IDE) developed by Google. [2] It is based on Visual Studio Code , and the infrastructure runs on Google Cloud . In addition to including the features, languages and plugins supported by VS Code , it has unique functionality built by Google.
Vite – Standard Tooling for rapid Vue.js development Vue Loader – a webpack loader that allows the writing of Vue components in a format called Single-File Components (SFCs) Official libraries
Pennsylvania Democrat Sen. John Fetterman said he hopes President-elect Donald Trump is successful in his second term and that he's not "rooting against him." "If you're rooting against the ...
The Svelte maintainers also maintain a number of integrations for popular software projects under the Svelte organization including integrations for Vite, Rollup, Webpack, TypeScript, VS Code, Chrome Developer Tools, ESLint, and Prettier. [30] A number of external projects such as Storybook have also created integrations with Svelte and SvelteKit.
From December 2008 to December 2012, if you bought shares in companies when Edward A. Kangas joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a 71.0 percent return on your investment, compared to a 60.5 percent return from the S&P 500.