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Implement the Vue.Draggable plugin to add drag and drop support to our Vue.js application and sync the changes to the server
This episode we handle drag and drop of cards in their own column and also between columns in our boards
Improve the design of our Vue.js & Rails clone of Trello by making lists more visually distinct and setting up horizontal scrolling
Refactoring our trello clone into sub-components and introducing a global datastore to really clean up our code
In this episode, we add card component, editing of cards, and the ability to create new lists
Adding Vuex as our Data Store gives us the ability to add realtime updates to our trello clone across browsers using ActionCable
A look into Stimulus JS, a new Javascript framework by Basecamp to pair closely with Turbolinks
Build out a Twitter UI with a tweet form and inline editing using Stimulus JS
Learn how to deeply integrate your Vue.js components with Ruby on Rails views
Learn how to use Vue.js slots to make even more reusable components. In this episode, we build a dropdown menu for Tailwind CSS apps using Vue.js slots.
Use the jstz Javascript timezone library to help auto-detect and set the user's time zone in your Rails apps
Starting our Embeddable JS Widget series outlining the comment and discussion models and the basic webpacker setup
The next step in our embeddable javascript widget series is setting up our Vue frontend to talk with our Rails backend using Vuex
Embeddable Javascript Widgets often contain forms. We're using Vuex to build our comment form widget and we're going to use vue-map-fields to make this easier.
Cross-origin Resource Sharing (CORS) allows your website to talk to other websites.
We don't want anyone to be able to embed your Javascript widget on any domain, so we'll setup our app to check the domain and only allow the widget on specific sites
We can use webpacker to create scoped styles for our Javascript widget and build an embed code that links to the latest version of our webpacker JS and CSS for our embeddable widget.
Autosaving draft records allows you to make sure users don't lose their work and can easily write draft content without publishing right away. We'll be using Stimulus to build an autosave controller for our form and Draftsman to power the backend.
Creating draft records in your database can be tricky. We'll be using the Draftsman gem to help us create draft versions of our records with our autosave Javascript
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