Go UX libraries like mole, design, unison, quick-git and go-onion give us a good start in the development process. This allows us to scale up our service without having to worry about adding more machines or managing more servers. It also makes it easier to develop applications because we don't have any extra overhead when testing them locally. They are well known because they are used by a lot of developers and designers. In this post, we will see how easily one can use these libraries to build an interface for the app. Mole is a framework for building web interfaces using declarative programming. Mole is a UI library for Go that provides a simple API for creating complex interfaces using simple components. It’s visual, declarative, and easy to use. Go UX libraries like mole, design, unison, quick-git and go-onion give us a good start in the development process. This allows us to scale up our service without having to worry about adding more machines or managing more servers. It also makes it easier to develop applications because we don't have any extra overhead when testing them locally. A few of the most popular open source Go UX libraries for developers are
moleby davrodpin
CLI application to create ssh tunnels focused on resiliency and user experience.
moleby davrodpin
Go 1630 Version:v2.0.0 License: Permissive (MIT)
designby phodal
Design as Code, a DSL for UX & backend modeling. DSL to Sketch file, Sketch to DSL, DSL to code.
designby phodal
Go 25 Version:Current License: Permissive (MIT)
unisonby richardwilkes
A unified graphical user experience toolkit for Go desktop applications
unisonby richardwilkes
Go 40 Version:v0.57.0 License: Weak Copyleft (MPL-2.0)
doublequoteby hi019
An RSS reader prioritizing UI/UX.
doublequoteby hi019
Go 1 Version:Current License: Permissive (Apache-2.0)
Quick-Gitby Matt-Gleich
⚡ An advanced version of the git cli. Speed and amazing UX.
Quick-Gitby Matt-Gleich
Go 1 Version:Current License: Permissive (MIT)