Unpoly 3.14 is now available!
The 50 changes include global scripting policies and fragment-based overlay close conditions.
github.com/unpoly/unpoly/dis…
Presenting a Hypermedia fact check at Web & Wine Augsburg this Thursday (Jan 29th).
If you're an SPA enjoyer who is curious about tools like @htmx_org and @unpolyjs, this talk is very much for you.
I'm talking about "The Limits of Hypermedia" at the Ruby meetup in Augsburg this Thursday (Jan 22nd).
There'll be free food and drinks, and you can stamp your @therubypassport at our local Embassy branch.
I'm speaking about "Limits of Hypermedia" at c't webdev in Cologne (Nov 12-14).
If you've held off on tools like @htmx_org and @unpolyjs, but aren't sure if they can really replace your SPA, this talk is for you.
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If you’re familiar with what Rails and Laravel bring to the table, please go tell your JavaScript friends about @adonisframework so they too can experience the productivity gains of a batteries-included framework.
Unpoly 3.11 lets you keep an element as long as its data remains the same. Only when the element's [up-data] or [data-*] attributes change, it is replaced by the new version.
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When a form field with [up-switch] changes, you can control arbitrary state of dependent elements. Built-in effects are toggling visibility and disabling. You can also implement arbitrary switching effects.
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We're introducing optional commercial support for businesses that depend on Unpoly. You can now sponsor bug fixes, commission new features, or get direct help from Unpoly’s core developers.
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Support commissions will fund Unpoly’s ongoing development while keeping it fully open source for everyone. The Discussions board remains available for free community support, and the maintainers will also remain active there.
More details at unpoly.com/support