There are many options, each with their own pros and cons. Also, you may or may not like their default styling and/or styling options. There is no one size fits all. Having said that, we maintain an incomplete list of popular UI libraries here:
Dashboards, tabs, trees, ... usually require at least some JavaScript to work properly. For some components, you may be able to use hacks around that. But I would generally not recommend that outside of experimentation. So a pure CSS framework is not going to work. It seems that you are not using a frontend framework like Vue.js. So I would recommend a library using web components for the interactivity. One good option is Shoelace [1] and there are a couple of others, too [2]. Take a look at the ones with the checkmark in the "W" column for libraries with web components.
There are certainly more UI libraries available for React than any other framework [1]. But do you think that these are also clearly better? What would be your go to framework for React? To me, it seems that the trend is going to framework-agnostic or multi-framework libraries anyway (e.g. Ark UI or Zag).
Hi there. We create FrontAid CMS as another headless, Git-based CMS like Tina. And we integrate directly with Uploadcare.
You can find more information here:
Yes, that's it. Judging from the screencast, I will continue using lazygit for that though. Not a fan of all the clicking. Hopefully there will be a keystroke available for it.
I don't know Rider, but I assume this is a limitation in all of their IDEs. Yes, you can commit only certain changes within a file. But you can only do that based on whole chunks. For example, if you add two new lines at the end of an existing file, you cannot commit only one line but not the other. The same limitation applies to changelists (at least in IntelliJ IDEA and Webstorm).
I use IntelliJ IDEA and often rely on their own Git functionality. But it cannot stage specific lines, only whole chunks [1]. For that, I've been using lazygit for a couple of months now. I like its simple UI and that it makes staging specific lines very easy and quick. If you like lazygit, you might also be interested in similar Git CLI clients that I collected here [2].
https://frontaid.ch/web/ui/libraries.html