A port of Radix UI for Svelte
Radix Svelte is a community-led Svelte port of Radix UI Primitives, a set of unstyled and accessible components for building design systems and web apps. While not endorsed or affiliated with Radix UI/WorkOS, Radix Svelte aims to provide similar functionality for the Svelte ecosystem. It offers tree-shakeable components, TypeScript and SvelteKit support, adherence to WAI-ARIA guidelines, examples and documentation, and a focus on accessibility, extensibility, quality, and consistency.
React is a widely used JavaScript library for building user interfaces and single-page applications. It follows a component-based architecture and uses a virtual DOM to efficiently update and render UI components
Svelte is a modern front-end framework that compiles your code at build time, resulting in smaller and faster applications. It uses a reactive approach to update the DOM, allowing for high performance and a smoother user experience.
Vite is a build tool that aims to provide a faster and leaner development experience for modern web projects
Tailwind CSS is a utility-first CSS framework that provides pre-defined classes for building responsive and customizable user interfaces.
Radix Primitives is a low-level UI component library with a focus on accessibility, customization and developer experience. You can use these components either as the base layer of your design system, or adopt them incrementally.
ESLint is a linter for JavaScript that analyzes code to detect and report on potential problems and errors, as well as enforce consistent code style and best practices, helping developers to write cleaner, more maintainable code.
PostCSS is a popular open-source tool that enables web developers to transform CSS styles with JavaScript plugins. It allows for efficient processing of CSS styles, from applying vendor prefixes to improving browser compatibility, ultimately resulting in cleaner, faster, and more maintainable code.
TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript, providing optional static typing, classes, interfaces, and other features that help developers write more maintainable and scalable code. TypeScript's static typing system can catch errors at compile-time, making it easier to build and maintain large applications.