
Security News
Vite+ Joins the Push to Consolidate JavaScript Tooling
Evan You announces Vite+, a commercial, Rust-powered toolchain built on the Vite ecosystem to unify JavaScript development and fund open source.
Please see the main Hops Readme for general information and a Getting Started Guide.
Hops is everything you need to develop and deploy a production grade universal web application with React. It provides both a universal runtime as well as the necessary build tooling.
To create a new Hops application run the following in a terminal:
npx create-hops-app my-hops-app
Note: If you prefer to use yarn
, you can substitute the above command with yarn create hops-app my-hops-app
.
Then move into the newly created directory:
cd my-hops-app
And start the development server:
npm start
This will start Hops in development mode. Visit http://localhost:8080 to see your app in the browser and make some changes to the code in your editor to see it live-reloading.
Check out the main Hops Readme for more detailed explanations and documentation.
FAQs
Hops main Package to build and run Hops applications
The npm package hops receives a total of 181 weekly downloads. As such, hops popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that hops demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 8 open source maintainers 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.
Security News
Evan You announces Vite+, a commercial, Rust-powered toolchain built on the Vite ecosystem to unify JavaScript development and fund open source.
Security News
Ruby Central’s incident report on the RubyGems.org access dispute sparks backlash from former maintainers and renewed debate over project governance.
Research
/Security News
Socket researchers uncover how threat actors weaponize Discord across the npm, PyPI, and RubyGems ecosystems to exfiltrate sensitive data.