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Security News
vlt Launches "reproduce": A New Tool Challenging the Limits of Package Provenance
vlt's new "reproduce" tool verifies npm packages against their source code, outperforming traditional provenance adoption in the JavaScript ecosystem.
@code-hike/classer
Advanced tools
Classer is a tool from Code Hike
A little package to make React component libraries interoperable with most styling solutions. (See this twitter thread explaining why this is useful)
You write your library code like this:
// foo-library code
import { useClasser } from "@code-hike/classer"
export function Foo({ classes }) {
const c = useClasser("foo", classes)
return (
<div className={c("container")}>
<h1 className={c("title")}>Hello</h1>
<p className={c("description")}>World</p>
<img
className={c("img")}
src="https://placekitten.com/200/200"
/>
</div>
)
}
And the library consumers use it like this in their apps:
import { Foo } from "foo-library"
const classes = {
"foo-title": "my-app-blue",
"foo-img": "rounded-corners some-border",
}
function MyApp() {
return <Foo classes={classes} />
}
MyApp
renders this HTML:
<div class="foo-container">
<h1 class="foo-title my-app-blue">Hello</h1>
<p class="foo-description">World</p>
<img
class="foo-img rounded-corners some-border"
src="https://placekitten.com/200/200"
/>
</div>
Examples:
You can also do this (to avoid passing classes
to nested components):
// foo-library code
import {
useClasser,
ClasserProvider,
} from "@code-hike/classer"
export function Foo({ classes }) {
return (
<ClasserProvider classes={classes}>
<FirstChild />
<SecondChild />
</ClasserProvider>
)
}
function FirstChild() {
const c = useClasser("foo-first")
return <h1 className={c("title")}>Hi</h1>
}
function SecondChild() {
const c = useClasser("foo-second")
return <h1 className={c("title")}>Ho</h1>
}
import { Foo } from "./foo-library"
import styles from "./app.module.css"
const classes = {
"foo-title": styles.myTitle,
"foo-img": styles.myImage,
}
function MyApp() {
return <Foo classes={classes} />
}
MIT
FAQs
> Classer is a tool from [Code Hike](https://codehike.org)
The npm package @code-hike/classer receives a total of 7,877 weekly downloads. As such, @code-hike/classer popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @code-hike/classer demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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