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HTMX update - online edit of handbook/troggle/trogspeculate.html - on dev machine 'SnowWhite'
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@@ -83,7 +83,13 @@ the stability we want that Javascript is failing to provide, such as <a href=
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"https://github.com/zauberzeug/nicegui">NiceGUI</a> and <a href=
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"https://github.com/pynecone-io/pynecone" rel="noopener noreferrer">Pynecone</a>. Though things running on <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebAssembly">wasm</a> are perhaps going to be more future-proof. [2023].
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<p>It looks possible that the <a href="https://htmx.org/"><HTMX></a> approach may settle down to replace HTML5 and also subsume a lot of what is now provided inside Javascript frameworks. We will wait until then.
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<p>[Update April 2023] It does indeed look as if HTMX is likely to be important in the future when we want to refresh only parts of pages. See this article: <a href="https://fly.io/blog/a-no-js-solution-for-dynamic-search-in-django/">A 'No JS' Solution for Dynamic Search in Django</a>. Something along these lines seems likely to appear in a future release of HTML.
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<p>[Update April 2023] It does indeed look as if HTMX is likely to be important in the future when we want to refresh only parts of pages. See this article: <a href="https://fly.io/blog/a-no-js-solution-for-dynamic-search-in-django/">A 'No JS' Solution for Dynamic Search in Django</a>.
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<p>[Update June 2025] Yes, HTMX is catching on: <ul>
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<li><a href="https://python.plainenglish.io/htmx-python-how-i-create-full-stack-web-apps-without-javascript-a48617b3e31d">HTMX full stack</a>. <li>HTMX has "Stability as a Feature" and <a href="https://htmx.org/essays/future/">"No New Features as a Feature"</a>. <li><a href="https://www.wearedevelopers.com/en/magazine/537/is-htmx-worth-learning-in-2025-537">Is HTMX Worth Learning in 2025?</a>
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<li><a href="https://hamy.xyz/blog/2025-04_is-htmx-dying#htmx-usage-trends">HTMX usage trends</a>
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<p>Something along the lines of HTMX seems likely to appear in a future release of HTML?
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</ul>
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<h3>Our biggest problem</h3>
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We need:
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