Top products from r/reactjs

We found 16 product mentions on r/reactjs. We ranked the 16 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/reactjs:

u/albinotonnina · 3 pointsr/reactjs

Hi! Thanks for your reply! Good point!
I disagree on that UX rule. This is based on my readings.
Main source: Steve Crug - Don't make me think
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Dont-Make-Think-Revisited-Usability/dp/0321965515/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_14_t_0?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=TDYRVK2QDQRXX3QZ77ZS

Or this post:
https://ux.stackexchange.com/a/40446/102854

So yes, I'm trading clicks for layout simplicity.

"Navigation should get the user where they need to go, with clear, well-defined paths and decision points"

This thing is more about this.

About the cues from small devices well yes, we prefer larger screens I definitely agree with you. But are we on our mobile a lot?
Do you feel that the tapping and the scrolling became sort of natural for all of us? Do you have this general sense of people preferring mobile apps to the more traditional web apps for desktop?
I'm trying to investigate on a mixed approach maybe? A lot of real estate and the simplicity of mobile navigation.

Also as a developer I can see in this technique some advantages, code wise. It's very easy to build apps like this.
You can create enormous quantities of user flows with little effort, not having to do a lot of layouting. It's easy to prototype or reiterate. Users also can basically create their own paths.

Obviously all this may be valid or not. It's experimentation, at least for me.

I have the luxury to try this technique on a product at work, I hope I'm going to test this soon.

Thank you for your comment! Let's discuss more if you want!

u/ToadstoolBeTrippin · 1 pointr/reactjs

This is actually a highly debatable topic that has strong arguments on both sides. Most of the time people would like topics to be fun and entertaining, but sometimes that can't always be the case.

There was a topic in /r/Teachers that talks about this. Some things in life can't be taught in fun ways. It's unrealistic to make every topic engaging.

There's also a book called Amusing Ourselves to Death that talks about the possible negative consequences of incorporating too much entertainment into all aspects of our lives, including education.

As I've gotten older, I've strayed away from things being fun in my learning process. It adds a layer of extra fluff that lengthens the time it takes for me to get through the material, and in some cases actually dumbs down the material. I like to understand the topic quickly and in depth so I can start using the knowledge to make cool stuff right away.

This is different for a student that has been living in classrooms since they were 5. That student yearns for an interesting and fun lecture because they have to live through them everyday. Their end goal is learning the material instead of doing something with that material.

u/_thousandisland · 4 pointsr/reactjs

I'm a full stack noob currently tackling a similar thing. Not there yet but these sites have helped:

https://daveceddia.com/create-react-app-express-backend/

http://mern.io/

And I ordered this book in the mail. Not here yet so can't recommend myself, but I've heard good things.
https://www.amazon.com/Pro-MERN-Stack-Development-Express/dp/1484226526

I'm most interested in whether the book uses react router v4 or earlier. Will report back.

Good luck!

u/trekinbami · 6 pointsr/reactjs

I guess there are a lot of free resources by now, but these worked best for me:

Wes Bos's course was a big help (http://www.reactforbeginners.com)

After that i went with Pro React by Cassio Sousa Antonio (http://www.amazon.com/Pro-React-Cassio-Sousa-Antonio/dp/1484212614/)

u/fedosejev · 2 pointsr/reactjs

Fulltime | Contract | London, UK | Remote


​

I am Art, a senior front-end developer based in London, UK. I build React apps, write React tutorials and books. I have extensive experience with JavaScript. Lately I've worked with React, Redux, TypeScript and Node.js, amongst other tools.

Available for on-site contract roles in London and remote in the rest of the world. Interested in relocating to the US.

  • LinkedIn
  • React.Tips - my React tutorials.
  • GitHub

    Former clients: Imperial College London, Trainline, Boston Consulting Group Digital Ventures, and others.

    CV/Resume is available on request.

    Feel free to get in touch: [email protected]
u/dceddia · 1 pointr/reactjs

To add to this, the ATR 2100-USB is a very decent USB mic and not crazy expensive. Here's a 30 second vid (How to Deploy Create React App to Surge) recorded with that mic.

fwiw I don't think the audio quality is all that bad, but it does sound too "compressed" or something. Like those old MP3s in 64kbps. So you may want to check your export settings too.

u/freesoftwareaddict · 1 pointr/reactjs

My best professor from Neumont University wrote this one after our Software Design class. He didn't like how expensive all the text books were and he didn't like half of the things in the other books, so he wrote his own condensed version.

u/rwieruch · 2 pointsr/reactjs

It should have the most recent version https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07K5TF5LP but I didn't announce it yet :-)

u/joshuaherman · -2 pointsr/reactjs

If you read this book you wouldn't need that one.

u/cocorebop · 18 pointsr/reactjs

I keep a copy of this book on my desk. I've never read it but I'll be damned if it's not sitting on my desk.