This is nice. If you are looking for more choices, Tabler[1] is another such component template, and I have used it to knock off visual dashboards fast. Not related; just another happy user.
Is this similar to those kitchen-sink bootstrap themes that used to be popular, with jquery, charting libs and whatnot included, that your client buys for you to speed things up even though you're coding React?
Flowbite and shadcn-ui are ones to look at. I also like rsuite but it's super bloated which is my main complaint, but it has the best check-tree-picker component I've found.
After a quick test, I have found that it doesn't provide a way to a select date from years ago. How am I supposed to select January 2017? going back 1 month at a time? It's a very common use case.
When a tool I use across jobs has a bunch of features that are controlled by toggles, then what I get from the tool changes every time I change jobs. No two teams are going to vote 'yes' on the exact same set of features, which means each job is a new adventure in 'will I be able to make this tool sit up and bark for us or will it be a constant source of stress?'.
Making UI elements like the month picker optional screams of internal schizophrenia in the team. Just turn it on. If you have some loud customer who insists they not be there, make a custom CSS file that hides them.
Don't make your users have to spend scarce social capital to get features that were available in the box. Just turn it on, man.
Take decisions :). Customization as a way to make an app better for my personal needs versus me (as a designer) not knowing how the app should be used and shifting the responsibility to the end user.
Which is of course much more under the hood than just the frontend, but it's trivial to setup with docker and the learning curve is a joke.
Plus: your sql-skills create great charts :) and the dashboards can be shared. Another new option is easily embedding created charts and dashboards into other websites.
Very nice visual style, just one (recurring) gripe: Line charts apparently do not allow for zooming in or panning data (which is critical for reviewing time series).
This is something I come across in pretty much every single dashboard/charting example, and that can turn a dashboard from "just a pretty thing" to "extremely useful".
You probably just want Tailwind css in react native. There are a few options to get those in. This tremor is mostly just some wrappers around tailwind.
This seems really good for standard Saas reporting pages. Looks like it's missing two things that seem to be pretty common: funnel charts and a drag n' drop layout where users can self organize the cards / add new ones. Any chance that's coming?
I really like this changelog page -- makes me wonder why isn't some easy to use custom HTML element for displaying a changelog page now that we have conventional commits (and at least one or two programs that generate changelogs programmatically from them)
Thank you for sharing. I have been utilizing it for my ongoing project. However, I am curious about the reason behind your decision to change the class name of Tailwind to "-tremor-".
I'm a big fan of Tremor! Initially used it for their next level AreaChart but now using everything I can because they're just really nicely designed. The tailwind integration is great too.
Please fix the scroll restoration, it makes it extremely annoying to navigate. Especially on the component view where I look at a component and want to go back and look at the next one
This is seemingly used by everyone in car racing, tuning, etc.
But most of the software like this are all pretty ancient Win98 styled interfaces using what looks like MFC.
Is there any reason that Tremor or Tabler or Highcharts or D3 or any other modern dataviz hasnt usurped this space? Why isn't there a web based analytics tool for the auto sector?
1. https://tabler.io