NativeScript might be a bit more popular than Luxon. We know about 18 links to it since March 2021 and only 14 links to Luxon. 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.
I'm curious about this topic as well. I would also add NativeScript[1] in the comparison. [1] https://nativescript.org/. - Source: Hacker News / 29 days ago
This is not so much the Svelte equivalent of React Native as it is just NativeScript (https://nativescript.org). - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
There is also https://nativescript.org/ which would allow you to use Vue (or several other frameworks) to build a mobile app. Used it myself a while back for an iPad app using Vue 2 and it was pretty straightforward. It seems like there have been quite a few improvements since then so might be worth a look. Source: about 1 year ago
Anyone who thinks this sucks should try NativeScript with hassle-free update experience, quick build time, HMR, direct access to native apis, use React Native plugins and more. Pick any style you like - vanilla, Angular, Vue, React, Svelte - and easily add some SwiftUI and Jetpack Compose views if you want a and connect it to your JS. Docs are a bit behind at the moment but a major update is in progress.... Source: about 1 year ago
There are layers that offer access to native APIs like capacitor, cordova and nativescript. Apparently sometimes multiple of them should be used, but I didn't understand what are the differences even after reading the announcement. These seem to be frontend agnostic technologies and Capacitor is apparently the more modern choice at the moment. Source: over 1 year ago
Luxon (14.7k ⭐) — A library that leverages JavaScript’s Intl for speed and slimness while providing what Intl doesn’t: an immutable user-friendly API. It also supports time zones and localization. - Source: dev.to / 6 days ago
To be honest, use a library where someone else figured out the ambiguities and accounted for the edge cases. Good starting point: https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/math Date-fns is fine for simpler use cases but Luxon is a lot more complete, especially where it comes to time zones. - Source: Hacker News / 3 months ago
You should never, ever do date math naively like this. There are too many unexpected edge case, especially between time zones or daylight savings time or leap years, but even without them: https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/math In fact I would strongly argue you should never use the JS Date built-in at all because they are terrible. Use a library like Luxon or date-fns. As a frontend dev, this is the most common... - Source: Hacker News / 3 months ago
Eleventyone’s project scaffold includes: Eleventy with a skeleton site, a date format filter for Nunjucks based on Luxon, a tiny CSS pipeline with PostCSS, an equally tiny inline JS pipeline, JS search index generator, Netlify Dev for testing Netlify redirects, and a serverless (FaaS) development pipeline with Netlify Dev and Netlify Functions. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
Luxon is a powerful and lightweight JavaScript library for working with dates and times. It was created as an alternative to the popular Moment.js library, with the goal of being faster, smaller, and easier to use. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
React Native - A framework for building native apps with React
date-fns - date-fns provides the most comprehensive yet simple and consistent toolset for manipulating JavaScript dates in a browser & Node.js.
Ionic - Ionic is a cross-platform mobile development stack for building performant apps on all platforms with open web technologies.
Day.js - 2kB JavaScript date utility library
Apache Cordova - Platform for building native mobile applications using HTML, CSS and JavaScript
Moment.js - Parse, validate, manipulate, and display dates in JavaScript