I am currently working in react js, and to work with css modules, every-time I make new component and I have to make corresponding css module file. I want snippet to make both files. Is there any way?
Related
If I used both of them, could I run into conflicts? Is this a good approach to use?
It is possible and the MUI team has been resolved it.
From the documentation:
If you are used to Tailwind CSS and want to use it together with the MUI components, you can start by cloning the Tailwind CSS example project. If you use a different framework or already have set up your project.
It is necessary to Remove Tailwind's base directive in favor of the CssBaseline component provided by #mui/material and fix the CSS injection order.
You can read how: https://mui.com/guides/interoperability/#tailwind-css
Yes you can run both ui framework. But it is not a good approach. Every ui framework has the complete solution for designing ui part. Like in tailwind css you can have the JIT compiler for compilation your custom css. Or the other hand MUI has also.
I think you can go through just only on ui framework. I have suggestion for ui. For your next js project you can use-
Tailwind Css
Theme-ui
Thank you.
Definitely, You will be in a big problem because once you initialize a styling library it applies its basic styles to the components so that if you are using more than one styling library you may not be able to change the behavior or styles of the components.
It also leads to rubbish suggestions while adding classes names and so on.
Stick to a UI libray and go with it.If you cant get it using the ui libraray do it yourself using CSS that could be more interesting and you can have more control over the components.
Use Mui base instead of Mui core.
https://mui.com/base/guides/working-with-tailwind-css/
I have tried using Mui and Tailwindcss together and it's not worth it. First, you will have to use Mui/base instead of Mui/material in order to reduce conflicts check https://mui.com/base/guides/working-with-tailwind-css. And if you really need to customize Mui components styled of the sx prop. This is just my opinion.
I'm trying import css just like I do normally in react.
import "#styles/my_lovely_component.sass"
It obviously shows the error that I cannot import global styles in components. If I change the name from my_lovely_component.sass to my_lovely_component.module.sass, the error is suppressed but the styles aren't really applied/included on my page or components.
I found out people use component styles like this
import styles from "#styles/my_lovely_component.module.sass"
const JustAComponent = () => <img className={styles.doggo_img} />
This gets annoying very quickly. I literally have been working by importing all styles globally in __app.ts, because I couldn't find a working solution to import styles like the good old(well not really old) way.
Any help will be appreciated. Thanks.
(I did consider the other styling methods like styled-jsx/components, emotion and stuff. But they're even more annoying.)
If you want to add global styles for your next project
At first you need loader in next-config.js
then read about _document.js where you can add global styles to the head.
I want to use GWT bootstrap for my application, so I added the jar to the classpath and inherited it in app.gwt.xml and it is working so far (I am new to Bootstrap).
So far I haven't used UIBinders for the layout and if in any way possible would like to leave it that way as I have a very dynamic UI which is generated programmatically and I have little experience with UIBinders. However for the elements that I want to use from gwtbootstrap I have created UIBinders (such as headings and buttons).
The problem is that not only the elements I create with UIBinders using the gwtbootstrap elements look like gwtbootstrap elements, but all elements on the page.
A simple example: it makes no difference whatsoever if I create a Heading like this using a bootstrap element
<b:Heading size="2">Hello GWT Bootstrap</b:Heading>
or like this using standard HTML
<h1>Hello GWT Bootstrap</h1>
both look like a GWT Bootstrap heading. The same applies for all other elements, so any element on the page is styled by gwtbootstrap, even if I don't want it to and I can't find a way to control this.
That's because gwt-bootstrap injects the bootstrap.css into your GWT app and bootstrap.css defines default styles for standard HTML elements like <h1>, etc.
If you don't want bootstrap to override the default styles there are several solutions:
Modify the bootstrap.css in the gwt-bootstrap library file and remove the styles that you don't want
Create a separate css file that sets the styles for the specific HTML elements back (using !important)
Extends gwt-bootstraps CssResources and pass a custom css file.
Solution 3 is probably the cleanest one.
I have various .PSD files that compose an interface. I am trying to learn GWT and GWT-Designer. Can anybody point me to a way to import those files with GWT-Designer so that I may code the interface ?
Thank you
GWT-Designer doesn't import PSD files directly. I would look at the various panels and widgets available in GWT Designer and try to map those to the elements in your image file. Since you're learning, start with something simple and move up from there.
I'm new to GWT, and I'm sure this is answered in SO somewhere but I've yet to find
I downloaded the GWT 2.0 eclipse plugin, and was pleased to see it comes with a starter project.
However, I was surprised that when running it, there is an unpleasent flickering...
The text loads without the CSS first
It takes a while untill the select box apears
(If you don't see the flicker, try and press F5 to refresh)
All mature GWT apps seem to have a loader before that but I didn't find an easy, standard way to add it.
It seems this app loads in this order: (correct me please if I mixed it up, its only my guess)
Basic layout HTML,
All JavaScript, and CSS
Runs the logic on the "onload" event (soonest time your compiled javaScript can start - ?)
So I can't programmatically add a loading spinner before GWT was loaded, a bit of a catch 22 for me
Am I missing something basic? is there a best practice way to add that initial spinner?
I was thinking simply adding a div with an animated gif, and in the onload event - hide it.
But I'm sure there is something better.
Let me know if this is a duplicate question
Update: found this related question, not answering mine though...
I've handled this problem before by not using the GWT module to load CSS, but loading it directly in the tag itself. If you do this, the browser will always load the CSS first, even before the GWT JS is loaded.
This means you'll lose a bit of flexibility and speed, but its the only workaround I've used so far.
EDIT: Extra info cause I want the bounty :D
If you do not remove the
<inherits name='com.google.gwt.user.theme.standard.Standard'/> from your module.gwt.xml file, then the GWT standard theme is loaded in the JS file that GWT creates. This JS file loads after the HTML page renders, and injects the CSS after load. Hence the flicker.
To avoid the flicker, you can comment out that line and insert your own stylesheet into the <head> of your HTML file. This ensures your CSS loads before the HTML renders, avoiding any flicker. If you really want the GWT theme, you get it out of the source code.
To use a spinner with GWT is quite easy. One simple way would be to keep it in a div with an id in the HTML file itself. Then, in the onModuleLoad(), simply hide that div by calling RootPanel.get("spinner").setVisible(false);
That should show the spinner till GWT loads itself.
Here's what we do to implement a spinner.
You put something like the following HTML just below the script line that loads your application (ie. the one with nocache.js). e.g.:
<div id="loading">
<div id="loading-msg">
<img src="icons/loading-page.gif" lt="loading">
<span>Loading the application, please wait...</span>
</div>
</div>
Then in your application EntryPoint you reach into the page using the DOM and remove that div. e.g.
final RootPanel loading = RootPanel.get("loading");
if (loading != null) {
DOM.removeChild(RootPanel.getBodyElement(),
loading.getElement());
}
Ehrann: I'm afraid the practice mentioned in the above answers is the only way for now. GWT doesn't provide similar features to show/hide a "loading" frame "on the fly". I guess one of the reason is that this requirement is not so "common" for all GWT users, one person might want a very different style of the "loading" than others. So you have to do that by yourself.
You can have a look at the GXT showcase page (based on GWT too): http://www.extjs.com/explorer/ for how they do that. For the source of it, download Ext GWT 2.1.0 SDK here: http://www.extjs.com/products/gxt/download.php and check the samples/explorer folder after extracting it. For details see the edit below:
EDIT
Check the source code for http://www.extjs.com/examples/explorer.html and you can see a div with id "loading". For each samples (extending Viewport), GXT.hideLoadingPanel(loadingPanelId) is called in onAttach() (the initialization), which hides the loading frame.
Check source code of Viewport here
Check source code of GXT.hideLoadingPanel here
You can do it in a similar way.
You could put an HTML loading message in the host page (use style attributes or embed the style tag in the header to make sure that it's styled), and remove the message once your modules has loaded, e. g. Document.get().getBody() with .setInnerHTML("") or .removeChild(), and then present your application programmatically however you want.