Skip to content

Commit 5d63b52

Browse files
Merge pull request #31 from reactjs/sync-5b6ad388
Sync with reactjs.org @ 5b6ad38
2 parents 882f682 + 22d8568 commit 5d63b52

28 files changed

+174
-22
lines changed

content/community/conferences.md

Lines changed: 15 additions & 6 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -22,11 +22,21 @@ December 6, 2019 in Berlin, Germany
2222

2323
[Website](https://reactday.berlin) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/reactdayberlin) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/reactdayberlin/) - [Videos](https://www.youtube.com/reactdayberlin)
2424

25+
### React Barcamp Cologne 2020 {#react-barcamp-cologne-2020}
26+
February 1-2, 2020 in Cologne, Germany
27+
28+
[Website](https://react-barcamp.de/) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/ReactBarcamp) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/reactbarcamp)
29+
2530
### ReactConf AU 2020 {#reactconfau}
2631
February 27 & 28, 2020 in Sydney, Australia
2732

2833
[Website](https://reactconfau.com/) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/reactconfau) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/reactconfau) - [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/reactconfau/)
2934

35+
### Reactathon 2020 {#reactathon-2020}
36+
March 30 - 31, 2020 in San Francisco, CA
37+
38+
[Website](https://www.reactathon.com) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/reactathon) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/events/575942819854160/)
39+
3040
### React Summit Amsterdam 2020 {#react-summit-2020}
3141
April 15-17, 2020 in Amsterdam, The Netherlands
3242

@@ -45,7 +55,7 @@ April 25, 2020 in Bangalore, India
4555
### render(ATL) 2020 {#render-atlanta-2020}
4656
May 4-6, 2020. Atlanta, GA, USA.
4757

48-
[Website](https://renderatl.com) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/renderATL) - [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/renderatl/) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/renderatl/)
58+
[Website](https://renderatl.com) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/renderATL) - [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/renderatl/) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/renderatl/)
4959

5060
### ReactEurope 2020 {#reacteurope-2020}
5161
May 14-15, 2020 in Paris, France
@@ -60,7 +70,7 @@ May 26-29 in Helsinki, Finland
6070
### React Next 2020 {#react-next-2020}
6171
June 15, 2020. Tel Aviv, Israel.
6272

63-
[Website](https://react-next.com/) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/reactnext) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/ReactNext2016/)
73+
[Website](https://react-next.com/) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/reactnext) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/ReactNext2016/)
6474

6575
### React Loop 2020 {#react-loop-2020}
6676
June 19, 2020. Chicago, Illinois, USA.
@@ -70,7 +80,7 @@ June 19, 2020. Chicago, Illinois, USA.
7080
### React Week NY 2020 {#react-week-ny-2020}
7181
July 17, 2020. New York City, USA.
7282

73-
[Website](https://reactweek.nyc/) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/reactweek) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/reactweek)
83+
[Website](https://reactweek.nyc/) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/reactweek) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/reactweek)
7484

7585

7686
## Past Conferences {#past-conferences}
@@ -412,8 +422,8 @@ August 22-23, 2019. Salt Lake City, USA.
412422

413423
[Website](https://www.reactrally.com/) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/ReactRally) - [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/reactrally/)
414424

415-
### React Conf Iran 2019 {#react-conf-iran-2019}
416-
August 29, 2019. Tehran, Iran.
425+
### React Conf Iran 2019 {#react-conf-iran-2019}
426+
August 29, 2019. Tehran, Iran.
417427

418428
[Website](https://reactconf.ir/) - [Videos](https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL-VNqZFI5Nf-Nsj0rD3CWXGPkH-DI_0VY) - [Highlights](https://github.com/ReactConf/react-conf-highlights)
419429

@@ -466,4 +476,3 @@ October 25, 2019 in London, UK
466476
October 19, 2019 in São Paulo, BR
467477

468478
[Website](https://reactconf.com.br/) - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/reactconfbr) - [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/ReactAdvanced) - [Slack](https://react.now.sh/)
469-

content/community/examples.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 0 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -9,6 +9,7 @@ permalink: community/examples.html
99
There are many example projects created by the React community. Feel free to add your own project. If you add a project, please commit to keeping it up to date with the latest versions of React.
1010

1111

12+
* **[Zeldog](https://yannsainty.github.io/Zeldog/)** A Zelda like game with a dog fighting ducks and more to eat pizza !
1213
* **[Calculator](https://github.com/ahfarmer/calculator)** Implementation of the iOS calculator built in React
1314
* **[Emoji Search](https://github.com/ahfarmer/emoji-search)** Simple React app for searching emoji
1415
* **[GitHub Battle App](https://tm.dev/react-course-project/)** Battle two GitHub users and see the most popular Github projects for any language.

content/community/meetups.md

Lines changed: 7 additions & 0 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -8,6 +8,9 @@ permalink: community/meetups.html
88

99
Do you have a local React.js meetup? Add it here! (Please keep the list alphabetical)
1010

11+
## Argentina {#argentina}
12+
* [Rosario](https://www.meetup.com/es/reactrosario)
13+
1114
## Australia {#australia}
1215
* [Brisbane](https://www.meetup.com/reactbris/)
1316
* [Melbourne](https://www.meetup.com/React-Melbourne/)
@@ -61,6 +64,7 @@ Do you have a local React.js meetup? Add it here! (Please keep the list alphabet
6164
* [Paris](https://www.meetup.com/ReactJS-Paris/)
6265

6366
## Germany {#germany}
67+
* [Cologne](https://www.meetup.com/React-Cologne/)
6468
* [Düsseldorf](https://www.meetup.com/de-DE/ReactJS-Meetup-Dusseldorf/)
6569
* [Hamburg](https://www.meetup.com/Hamburg-React-js-Meetup/)
6670
* [Karlsruhe](https://www.meetup.com/react_ka/)
@@ -133,6 +137,9 @@ Do you have a local React.js meetup? Add it here! (Please keep the list alphabet
133137
## Sweden {#sweden}
134138
* [Goteborg](https://www.meetup.com/ReactJS-Goteborg/)
135139

140+
## Switzerland {#switzerland}
141+
* [Zurich](https://www.meetup.com/Zurich-ReactJS-Meetup/)
142+
136143
## Ukraine {#ukraine}
137144
* [Kyiv](https://www.meetup.com/Kyiv-ReactJS-Meetup)
138145

content/community/nav.yml

Lines changed: 2 additions & 0 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -2,6 +2,8 @@
22
items:
33
- id: support
44
title: Support
5+
- id: team
6+
title: Team
57
- id: courses
68
title: Courses
79
- id: examples

content/community/team.md

Lines changed: 134 additions & 0 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,134 @@
1+
---
2+
id: team
3+
title: Team
4+
layout: community
5+
sectionid: community
6+
permalink: community/team.html
7+
---
8+
9+
React development is led by a small dedicated team working full time at Facebook. It also receives contributions from people all over the world.
10+
11+
## Meet the React Team {#meet-the-react-team}
12+
13+
The React team members work full time on the core component APIs, the engine that powers React DOM and React Native, React DevTools, and the React documentation website.
14+
15+
Current members of the React team are listed in alphabetical order below.
16+
17+
### Andrew Clark {#andrew-clark}
18+
19+
![Andrew Clark](../images/team/acdlite.jpg)
20+
21+
[@acdlite on GitHub](https://github.com/acdlite) · [@acdlite on Twitter](https://twitter.com/acdlite)
22+
23+
Andrew got started with web development by making sites with WordPress, and eventually tricked himself into doing JavaScript. His favorite pastime is karaoke. Andrew is either a Disney villain or a Disney princess, depending on the day.
24+
25+
### Brian Vaughn {#brian-vaughn}
26+
27+
![Brian Vaughn](../images/team/bvaughn.jpg)
28+
29+
[@bvaughn on GitHub](https://github.com/bvaughn) · [@brian\_d\_vaughn on Twitter](https://twitter.com/brian_d_vaughn)
30+
31+
Brian studied art in college and did programming on the side to pay for his education. Eventually, he realized that he enjoys working on open source. Brian has one [one-person band](https://soundcloud.com/brianvaughn/) and two [two-person](https://soundcloud.com/pilotlessdrone) [bands](https://soundcloud.com/pinwurm). He also takes care of the cutest cat in the world.
32+
33+
### Dan Abramov {#dan-abramov}
34+
35+
![Dan Abramov](../images/team/gaearon.jpg)
36+
37+
[@gaearon on GitHub](https://github.com/gaearon) · [@dan_abramov on Twitter](https://twitter.com/dan_abramov)
38+
39+
Dan got into programming after he accidentally discovered Visual Basic inside Microsoft PowerPoint. He has found his true calling in turning [Sebastian](#sebastian-markbage)'s tweets into long-form blog posts. Dan occasionally wins at Fortnite by hiding in a bush until the game ends.
40+
41+
### Dominic Gannaway {#dominic-gannaway}
42+
43+
![Dominic](../images/team/trueadm.jpg)
44+
45+
[@trueadm on GitHub](https://github.com/trueadm) · [@trueadm on Twitter](https://twitter.com/trueadm)
46+
47+
Dominic is interested in travelling, drum and bass, stand-up comedy and spending time with the family. He most enjoys hacking on new unexplored ideas around UIs and accessibility and has a passion for tweaking and optimizing code to get the most performance out of things.
48+
49+
### Luna Ruan {#luna-ruan}
50+
51+
![Luna](../images/team/lunaruan.jpg)
52+
53+
[@lunaruan on GitHub](https://github.com/lunaruan) · [@lunaruan on Twitter](https://twitter.com/lunaruan)
54+
55+
Luna learned programming because she thought it meant creating video games. Instead, she ended up working on the Pinterest web app, and now on React itself. Luna doesn't want to make video games anymore, but she plans to do creative writing if she ever gets bored.
56+
57+
### Nicolas Gallagher {#nicolas-gallagher}
58+
59+
![Nicolas](../images/team/necolas.jpg)
60+
61+
[@necolas on GitHub](https://github.com/necolas) · [@necolas on Twitter](https://twitter.com/necolas)
62+
63+
Nicolas has majored in anthropology. He started in web development by building a website for a friend, and eventually found himself rebuilding the Twitter website with React. Nicolas describes himself as boring on paper, not much better in real life.
64+
65+
### Rachel Nabors {#rachel-nabors}
66+
67+
![Rachel](../images/team/rnabors.jpg)
68+
69+
[@rachelnabors on GitHub](https://github.com/rachelnabors) · [@rachelnabors on Twitter](https://twitter.com/rachelnabors)
70+
71+
Rachel wrote a [book about UI animation](https://abookapart.com/products/animation-at-work) once and worked with MDN and the W3C on the web animations API. Now she is busy with education materials and community engineering on the React team. Secretly, she is an award-winning cartoonist for teenage girls. Catch her making fancy tea with lukewarm water in the microkitchen.
72+
73+
### Sebastian Markbåge {#sebastian-markbage}
74+
75+
![Sebastian](../images/team/sebmarkbage.jpg)
76+
77+
[@sebmarkbage on GitHub](https://github.com/sebmarkbage) · [@sebmarkbage on Twitter](https://twitter.com/sebmarkbage)
78+
79+
Sebastian majored in psychology. He's usually quiet. Even when he says something, it often doesn't make sense to the rest of us until a few months later. The correct way to pronounce his surname is "mark-boa-geh" but he settled for "mark-beige" out of pragmatism -- and that's how he approaches React.
80+
81+
### Sunil Pai {#sunil-pai}
82+
83+
![Sunil](../images/team/threepointone.jpg)
84+
85+
[@threepointone on GitHub](https://github.com/threepointone) · [@threepointone on Twitter](https://twitter.com/threepointone)
86+
87+
Sunil started writing JavaScript for IE6 and still has some regrets about it. He worked in consulting, design, and product firms, before joining the React team to help others do the same. Sunil plays a blue Les Paul guitar, loves London, and would appreciate a response to his last ping, please and thank you!
88+
89+
### Yuzhi Zheng {#yuzhi-zheng}
90+
91+
![Yuzhi](../images/team/yuzhi.jpg)
92+
93+
[@yuzhi on GitHub](https://github.com/yuzhi) · [@yuzhiz on Twitter](https://twitter.com/yuzhiz)
94+
95+
Yuzhi studied Computer Science in school. She liked the instant gratification of seeing code come to life without having to physically be in a laboratory. Now she manages the React team. Before management, she used to work on the Relay data fetching framework. In her spare time, Yuzhi enjoys optimizing her life via gardening and home improvement projects.
96+
97+
## Acknowledgements {#acknowledgements}
98+
99+
React was originally created by [Jordan Walke](https://github.com/jordwalke). Today, React has over a thousand open source contributors. We'd like to recognize a few people who have made significant contributions to React and its documentation in the past and have helped maintain them over the years:
100+
101+
* [Almero Steyn](https://github.com/AlmeroSteyn)
102+
* [Andreas Svensson](https://github.com/syranide)
103+
* [Alex Krolick](https://github.com/alexkrolick)
104+
* [Alexey Pyltsyn](https://github.com/lex111)
105+
* [Brandon Dail](https://github.com/aweary)
106+
* [Caleb Meredith](https://github.com/calebmer)
107+
* [Chang Yan](https://github.com/cyan33)
108+
* [Cheng Lou](https://github.com/chenglou)
109+
* [Christoph Nakazawa](https://github.com/cpojer)
110+
* [Christopher Chedeau](https://github.com/vjeux)
111+
* [Clement Hoang](https://github.com/clemmy)
112+
* [Flarnie Marchan](https://github.com/flarnie)
113+
* [Jason Quense](https://github.com/jquense)
114+
* [Jesse Beach](https://github.com/jessebeach)
115+
* [Jessica Franco](https://github.com/Jessidhia)
116+
* [Jim Sproch](https://github.com/jimfb)
117+
* [Josh Duck](https://github.com/joshduck)
118+
* [Joe Critchley](https://github.com/joecritch)
119+
* [Jeff Morrison](https://github.com/jeffmo)
120+
* [Keyan Zhang](https://github.com/keyz)
121+
* [Nat Alison](https://github.com/tesseralis)
122+
* [Nathan Hunzaker](https://github.com/nhunzaker)
123+
* [Paul O'Shannessy](https://github.com/zpao)
124+
* [Pete Hunt](https://github.com/petehunt)
125+
* [Philipp Spiess](https://github.com/philipp-spiess)
126+
* [Sander Spies](https://github.com/sanderspies)
127+
* [Sophia Shoemaker](https://github.com/mrscobbler)
128+
* [Sophie Alpert](https://github.com/sophiebits)
129+
* [Sasha Aickin](https://github.com/aickin)
130+
* [Tim Yung](https://github.com/yungsters)
131+
132+
This list is not exhaustive.
133+
134+
We'd like to give special thanks to [Tom Occhino](https://github.com/tomocchino) and [Adam Wolff](https://github.com/wolffiex) for their guidance and support over the years. We'd also like to thank all the volunteers who [translated React into other languages](https://isreacttranslatedyet.com/).

content/docs/code-splitting.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ parse the dynamic import syntax but is not transforming it. For that you will ne
109109

110110
> Note:
111111
>
112-
> `React.lazy` and Suspense are not yet available for server-side rendering. If you want to do code-splitting in a server rendered app, we recommend [Loadable Components](https://github.com/smooth-code/loadable-components). It has a nice [guide for bundle splitting with server-side rendering](https://www.smooth-code.com/open-source/loadable-components/docs/server-side-rendering/).
112+
> `React.lazy` and Suspense are not yet available for server-side rendering. If you want to do code-splitting in a server rendered app, we recommend [Loadable Components](https://github.com/gregberge/loadable-components). It has a nice [guide for bundle splitting with server-side rendering](https://loadable-components.com/docs/server-side-rendering/).
113113
114114
The `React.lazy` function lets you render a dynamic import as a regular component.
115115

content/docs/codebase-overview.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -217,7 +217,7 @@ Its source code is located in [`packages/react-reconciler`](https://github.com/f
217217

218218
### Event System {#event-system}
219219

220-
React implements a synthetic event system which is agnostic of the renderers and works both with React DOM and React Native. Its source code is located in [`packages/react-events`](https://github.com/facebook/react/tree/master/packages/react-events).
220+
React implements a synthetic event system which is agnostic of the renderers and works both with React DOM and React Native. Its source code is located in [`packages/legacy-events`](https://github.com/facebook/react/tree/master/packages/legacy-events).
221221

222222
There is a [video with a deep code dive into it](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dRo_egw7tBc) (66 mins).
223223

content/docs/concurrent-mode-reference.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ The `useTransition` hook returns two values in an array.
126126
**If some state update causes a component to suspend, that state update should be wrapped in a transition.**
127127

128128
```js
129-
const SUSPENSE_CONFIG = {timeoutMs: 2000 };
129+
const SUSPENSE_CONFIG = { timeoutMs: 2000 };
130130

131131
function App() {
132132
const [resource, setResource] = useState(initialResource);

content/docs/concurrent-mode-suspense.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -371,7 +371,7 @@ This `resource` object represents the data that isn't there yet, but might event
371371

372372
**As more data streams in, React will retry rendering, and each time it might be able to progress "deeper".** When `resource.user` is fetched, the `<ProfileDetails>` component will render successfully and we'll no longer need the `<h1>Loading profile...</h1>` fallback. Eventually, we'll get all the data, and there will be no fallbacks on the screen.
373373

374-
This has an interesting implication. Even if we use a GraphQL client that collects all data requirements in a single request, *streaming the response lets us show more content sooner*. Because we render-*as-we-fetch* (as opposed to *after* fetching), if `user` appear in the response earlier than `posts`, we'll be able to "unlock" the outer `<Suspense>` boundary before the response even finishes. We might have missed this earlier, but even the fetch-then-render solution contained a waterfall: between fetching and rendering. Suspense doesn't inherently suffer from this waterfall, and libraries like Relay take advantage of this.
374+
This has an interesting implication. Even if we use a GraphQL client that collects all data requirements in a single request, *streaming the response lets us show more content sooner*. Because we render-*as-we-fetch* (as opposed to *after* fetching), if `user` appears in the response earlier than `posts`, we'll be able to "unlock" the outer `<Suspense>` boundary before the response even finishes. We might have missed this earlier, but even the fetch-then-render solution contained a waterfall: between fetching and rendering. Suspense doesn't inherently suffer from this waterfall, and libraries like Relay take advantage of this.
375375

376376
Note how we eliminated the `if (...)` "is loading" checks from our components. This doesn't only remove boilerplate code, but it also simplifies making quick design changes. For example, if we wanted profile details and posts to always "pop in" together, we could delete the `<Suspense>` boundary between them. Or we could make them independent from each other by giving each *its own* `<Suspense>` boundary. Suspense lets us change the granularity of our loading states and orchestrate their sequencing without invasive changes to our code.
377377

content/docs/create-a-new-react-app.md

Lines changed: 0 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -73,8 +73,6 @@ The following toolchains offer more flexibility and choice. We recommend them to
7373

7474
- **[Neutrino](https://neutrinojs.org/)** combines the power of [webpack](https://webpack.js.org/) with the simplicity of presets, and includes a preset for [React apps](https://neutrinojs.org/packages/react/) and [React components](https://neutrinojs.org/packages/react-components/).
7575

76-
- **[nwb](https://github.com/insin/nwb)** is particularly great for [publishing React components for npm](https://github.com/insin/nwb/blob/master/docs/guides/ReactComponents.md#developing-react-components-and-libraries-with-nwb). It [can be used](https://github.com/insin/nwb/blob/master/docs/guides/ReactApps.md#developing-react-apps-with-nwb) for creating React apps, too.
77-
7876
- **[Parcel](https://parceljs.org/)** is a fast, zero configuration web application bundler that [works with React](https://parceljs.org/recipes.html#react).
7977

8078
- **[Razzle](https://github.com/jaredpalmer/razzle)** is a server-rendering framework that doesn't require any configuration, but offers more flexibility than Next.js.

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)