Skuuudle gives you the confidence to make winning pricing decisions.
Skuuudle are a superb company to deal with. Whoever I have dealt with has always taken the time to understand my requirements in great detail. The QC process and all communications from various points of contact within the company are first class in terms of accuracy and guidance. I have used the services of Skuuudle for 6+ years now and would be happy to recommend. Matt Boudin who has been my recent point of contact has continued with excellent advice and customer service. The data provided my Skuuudle services is accurate, on time and incredibly reliable.
Really professional and helpful team at Skuuudle. First class service and cost effective.
Great service from Skuuudle, the report is always accurate and the team are really helpful. Great o review products in bulk if infrequent, which is currently what we are using them for.
Based on our record, Haml seems to be a lot more popular than Skuuudle. While we know about 17 links to Haml, we've tracked only 1 mention of Skuuudle. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
First of all, I like Slim. I like the beauty and cleanness of Slim templates, to me they are way more readable than regular ERB templates and I think they fit in the ruby/Rails ecosystem very well. Slim is a close cousin to Haml, without the ugly percent characters, haha. I've used Slim exclusively in my projects since about 2016. - Source: dev.to / 6 months ago
> I can't say what problem it is supposed to solve "Haml accelerates and simplifies template creation" https://haml.info/ If you'd rather write raw HTML, keeping track of closing tags etc, then don't use HAML. No need to bash it because you personally feel it is ugly or unnecessary. FWIW I personally feel the exact opposite. - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
There is a better side by side of the syntax here https://haml.info (i've been using haml for 17 years lol, I find it more enjoyable to read and write). - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
Personally, I'd recommend Maud if you don't need something with runtime reloading. Not only is it much faster, it implements a template language that is effectively the Rust-syntax equivalent to Slim or Haml using a procedural macro, so you get compile-time verification that your HTML output is well-formed. Source: about 1 year ago
Does this support HAML-style syntax? We're 100% HAML-only for templating, whether normal Rails views or ViewComponent... https://github.com/haml/haml so going back to writing HTML or ERB feels like a huge downgrade. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago
You can look at tools like Skuuudle and PriceShape if you really want to get into pricing with clients. Source: about 1 year ago
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