Yeah it takes 2 seconds to render on my laptop. It's showing docs and examples of every component on a single page. It's convenient to use as a reference when programming. You probably wouldn't code your app like that.
From a purely pragmatic point of view, I can say that I write very little code when using react-bootstrap, can create screens quickly and the results look good. Not sure how much simpler of an API you can get. But to…
Compare for yourself: https://react-bootstrap.github.io/components.html#btn-dropdo... (click on show code) vs https://ng-bootstrap.github.io/#/components/dropdown (click on <>)
But can it compete with this? https://react-bootstrap.github.io/components.html
I only use the command line and have no use for Xcode. With LLVM or GCC I can install as many versions as I want side by side - not the case for Swift. Lame.
How can I get Swift 3.0 going on my Mac if I don't want to upgrade from Mavericks?
Yeah it takes 2 seconds to render on my laptop. It's showing docs and examples of every component on a single page. It's convenient to use as a reference when programming. You probably wouldn't code your app like that.
From a purely pragmatic point of view, I can say that I write very little code when using react-bootstrap, can create screens quickly and the results look good. Not sure how much simpler of an API you can get. But to…
Compare for yourself: https://react-bootstrap.github.io/components.html#btn-dropdo... (click on show code) vs https://ng-bootstrap.github.io/#/components/dropdown (click on <>)
But can it compete with this? https://react-bootstrap.github.io/components.html
I only use the command line and have no use for Xcode. With LLVM or GCC I can install as many versions as I want side by side - not the case for Swift. Lame.
How can I get Swift 3.0 going on my Mac if I don't want to upgrade from Mavericks?