V
2.1K posts

V
@boldureans
Front-end developer. Opinions are my own. 🇲🇩 🇮🇪
Dublin City, Ireland Katılım Aralık 2015
280 Takip Edilen127 Takipçiler

@pacovitiello @coss_com I'm happy to watch your GutHub commits, but I think that command could be executed like monthly and pull out all the recent changes :)
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@pacovitiello @coss_com Legend 💚
P.S. Can you guys do a update command, that gets the latest components and overrides them in the ui/?
This would be handy, for ex: you recently updated Button by adding loading spinner.
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Just dropped the @coss_com Drawer component 📦✨
✅ 4 directions + 3 built-in variants
✅ Snap points & Nested support
✅ Swipe-to-open area
✅ Responsive examples (Dialog & Menu → Drawer)
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@linear Congrats with update!
I wish you guys remove unnecessary icons on every dropdown option, it doesn't help :(
Niki Tonsky wrote about it in taking Tahoe as example.
tonsky.me/blog/tahoe-ico…
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@base_ui @pacovitiello 👀 just to let you know that we started migration to coss ui. And looking forward for drawer documentation. Tbh overall docs update 😇
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We're launching Claude Community Ambassadors. Lead local meetups, bring builders together, and partner with our team.
Open to any background, anywhere in the world.
Apply: claude.com/community/amba…

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I have been thinking about this a lot.
I think for a great many of engineers, the ones who did it because they loved it only to discover that money was in fact at the end of the rainbow found both the journey and the destination satisfying. In fact, I think I can argue with authority that the destination was only satisfying as the journey was difficult. The hard-fought evenings spent toiling away on an idea and codebase that slowly gives way to your vision was an incredible experience.
The group of people that fell into this category of hard-fought journey and destination we will call them tinkerers. One thing tinkerers have always hated is the already known problems. The journey is clear as day. The obstacles minor inconveniences. Its purely a matter of typing the solution into the terminal. This is also why I think so many of this group goes out and does open source, or starts companies. Work largely falls into this category with few exceptions.
From this reason is why I largely find UI work soul sucking. I know the solution, its a matter of just looking up the details and putting it into my editor. yawn. CSS, flex box this, grid that, put the tailwind classes in the bag.
To me, the LLM software world is with little to no journey and discovery. Its more of simply taking my high level idea and just formulating it into testable, atomic chunks that can be verified. I have traded my favorite part, discovery and raw creation, with itemized list of TODOs and patience and "No Mistakes."
To this, every morning from 6 to 9 I simply just hand code every thin. even UI things. It is because I want journey and discovery and raw creation. Maybe one day comes and its just so futile that I stop this. But for now, I still see such great value in this. I see such better thought through products. Because slowing down and truly thinking through everything. The architecture, the design, everything is an expression of discovery and creation. And I love it.
I am sure there will come a day, maybe even in the next 6 months where I change my mind. For now, I pursue the love of the game intentionally.
I do also believe that there exists people who get the same joy I got from building with tears and sweat by prompting LLMs. I am positive of it. I just don't understand how. But people love UI work. I also don't understand that.
Adam@adamdotdev
Programming was deeply satisfying work to me. Work for hours/days before getting the payoff of the code working well on your machine. I’m feeling so much friction now to open the editor and do this kind of task by hand, but also increasingly depressed with the nature of work in an AI assisted dev workflow. Back and forth prompting seems to eat at my soul. Need to find a balance that brings back some of the toil.
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@devongovett I could find a solution where the multiselects doesn't push any other fields below in the form, seems an impossible task. Having badges in/out always move the other fields :|
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@Keisinger Купил себе Studio Display пару лет назад и забыл про существование колонок или аудио системы.
Русский

#слухи от Марка Гурмана: сенсорный MacBook будет иметь Dynamic Island и OLED-дисплей
По данным инсайдера, новые модели MacBook Pro с чипом M6 будут презентованы в конце этого года и это будет первый ноутбук от Apple с сенсорным экраном:
t.me/aaplpro/28856

Русский

После таких до-после не так стыдно за свой сельский ебальник
👑 J³ABz👑@Jabz_CFC
I've never had any plastic surgery, The only thing I've done twice is Botox in my forehead" - Kendall Jenner
Русский

@ivan_developer @tannerlinsley Isn't this is where _pathless routes supposed to be fit?
I have same situation and based on the role just redirect to the right path + restrict access to layouts that are not meant to be for that role
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@tannerlinsley I use them for role-based routing, where the UI is different for different roles.
e.g.
@ client-layout
--project
----projectId
--client-specific-routes...
@ business-layout
--project
----projectId
--business-specific-routes...
@ onboarding-layout
--only-onboarding-route
@....
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I’m waiting for parallel routes to be released. This holds me from trying to migrate my nextjs app.
github.com/TanStack/route…
Tanner Linsley@tannerlinsley
@aidaniil Let me know how it goes!
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