diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 663ce35..a15aa7f 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -41,6 +41,9 @@ npm i formhero - [isValid](#isvalid) - [update](#update) +## 🤔 Motivation + +So why write yet another form utility you might ask? First off, I don't like the Formik approach. In my humble opition formik is very verbose and requires lots of boilerplate. Also does not work with hooks. [react-hook-form](https://react-hook-form.com/) is a very cool library and it is the main inspiration for formhero. It does almost everything right... typescript, no deps, small, concise. The problem that I found while using it was that 3rd party ui libs like ant-design or fabric ui do not always have the standart `onChange` or `value` props in their components. That is where react-hook-form starts falling apart. This is what formhero tries to address in the most minimalistic way possible, with as little code as needed. All in pure typescript and no deps. ## 🚀 Quickstart @@ -74,10 +77,6 @@ const Form = () => { } ``` -## 🤔 Motivation - -So why write yet another form utility you might ask? First off, I don't like the Formik approach. In my humble opition formik is very verbose and requires lots of boilerplate. Also does not work with hooks. [react-hook-form](https://react-hook-form.com/) is a very cool library and it is the main inspiration for formhero. It does almost everything right... typescript, no deps, small, concise. The problem that I found while using it was that 3rd party ui libs like ant-design or fabric ui do not always have the standart `onChange` or `value` props in their components. That is where react-hook-form starts falling apart. This is what formhero tries to address in the most minimalistic way possible, with as little code as needed. All in pure typescript and no deps. - ## 🔥 Examples [(More Here)](https://github.com/CupCakeArmy/formhero/tree/master/examples) ### Validation