Latency is the reason. Even in a turn based game it still feels really bad to make a move and have to wait for it to make its way through the round trip before seeing the result. In a game with strict ordering like Tic Tac Toe there is little reason not to show the chosen move immediately.
I mean, 100 ms between a click and a cross appearing on screen is not great user experience, but it's not even the worst. If you're writing a game, a little client side prediction is a good idea.
But if you have a form with instant validation, or any old regular UI, that is not necessary at all. The only built in optimistic UI functionality on Live View is disabling a button when you press it and wait for the server to respond, to avoid double submissions.
> But if you have a form with instant validation, or any old regular UI, that is not necessary at all.
Arguably because you're trusting the client and essentially the built or built-in behavior is therefore optimistic by default. Then hopefully validating on submission server-side.
From the tech talks I vaguely recall, LiveView folks seem to disregard latency, which is where the entire model falls apart for me because the moment you need more control on the client over what to do when the server is not responding - you’re entirely out of luck.
Though maybe I’m wrong and there has been some new developments to address this, I wasn’t following too closely.
On the contrary, LiveView documentation acknowledges this and suggests to handle such scenarios using client side tools:
There are also use cases which are a bad fit for LiveView: Animations - animations, menus, and general UI events that do not need the server in the first place are a bad fit for LiveView. Those can be achieved without LiveView in multiple ways, such as with CSS and CSS transitions, using LiveView hooks, or even integrating with UI toolkits designed for this purpose, such as Bootstrap, Alpine.JS, and similar.
Sorry, that’s not acknowledging that latency can become an issue, that’s acknowledging that using server-side rendering for things that don’t require a server isn’t the best of ideas (shocker, I know).
imagine an SPA for a basic CRUD system. there's a list view and details view with a delete button that returns you to the list.
in liveview server renders me the list view, i click details, server renders me details view, i click delete button, server renders me the list view.
if there's big latency/connection error/etc between clicking delete and getting back the rendered list - user just has to wait.
in spa i could optimistically assume that delete worked and render the list that i already have cached without the deleted item, allowing user to continue working immediately and if there was a disconnect/error - i could retry that delete in the background without bothering user, only prompting them after some number of retries.
don't see how could i implement this workflow in liveview.
You can do that in LiveView just as easily. Remove the item client side, then pushEvent to the server to handle the deletion. In case of any errors, notify the user, refresh the state .etc
pushEvent, pushEventTo (from client to server) [0]
> In case of any errors, notify the user, refresh the state .etc
so, "just use JS"?
every time you say "just use JS" you're diminishing the usecase of liveview because if i need so much js logic - why do i need to also use liveview if i can just use a framework/environment where i can share codebase between client and server seamlessly and have full control.
You stated don't see how could i implement this workflow in liveview.. I've presented you a way.
In case of any errors, notify the user, refresh the state .etc => This would all be done server-side and the client side would simply react automatically. The client side code in this case would have been minimal.
I don't think I'm diminishing anything. For quite a few years I was neck deep in React/Vue world. Now that I'm actively using LiveView, I can properly compare the differences between both approaches, cons and pros. For any new project, in the majority of cases I would pick Elixir with Phoenix LiveView instead of Elixir/Phoenix (backend) with React/Vue (frontend).
You’ve presented a workaround and a hack tbh, not something natively supported because the workflow doesn’t map to liveview model, which is fine but you have to be honest with yourself and acknowledge when stuff like that happens, otherwise you’re in for lots of fun down the line.
> For any new project, in the majority of cases I would pick Elixir with Phoenix LiveView instead of Elixir/Phoenix (backend) with React/Vue (frontend).
This could just be recency bias. New tech is always exciting, old tech is always linked to memories of all the issues you’ve had in the past.
I wouldn't say it's a hack, but I would agree it's not the standard way to do things in the LiveView world, exactly because latency it's an overstated or misunderstood issue. But if you want to do more, LiveView gives you the tools.
> This could just be recency bias. New tech is always exciting, old tech is always linked to memories of all the issues you’ve had in the past.
I still maintain some React/Vue apps and work with on a daily basis, so it's not a distant memory.
I like choosing the right tool for the right job. For example, I would still choose ReactNative over 2 different code bases for a mobile app for a small team that needs to move fast. For the 5% of cases when that wouldn't do you would need to go native. I see the situation similarly with LiveView. It's hard to beat its productivity & power in 95% of use cases.
I did a deep dive into liveview and this was my take away.
Its nice tech, but once you start introducing JS again to improve UX you really start asking yourself why you didn't just build it with react in the first place.
You could just delete the row with alpine or do a 3 line JS hook if you wanted to, it's quick and easy. That sounds a strange workflow though, it's generally better to make users wait for deletion.
isn't it funny that when you're trying to praise tech you like, all sorts of examples jump into mind, but when you try criticizing something you like - all that imagination vanishes and all existing examples can be dismissed as strange :)
I find it strange because that's not a behaviour I would use, but to each their own, it's the beauty of the web :).
If you really want to do it, you can add 3 lines on your project and that will work with any CRUD page you're building, I don't think that's unreasonable or difficult to do.
Edit:
Actually thinking about it, if you just made a form for that delete button and a phx-disable-with="" on the row it would probably work straight away without any JS hook.
surely you recognize that there is a gap in functionality between liveview and fully fledged frameworks that provide more granular control over ui interactions?
Like which other frameworks? You can code that example feature you pointed out quicker than in React if you want to. You have all the control you want in LiveView.
If you want a delete button per row, no code is needed and the phx-disable-with will work out of the box, if you want a global delete button on the top which deletes multiple rows front-end first before acknowledgement (with checkboxes + delete like in Gmail), 5 lines of JS maximum in a hook and you're set.
that you can't even acknowledge that there is a gap in functionality between liveview, a fairly opinionated framework for server side rendering and fully fledged client-side frameworks tells me this is not going to be a productive conversation, so i'm out, bye
Have you even used LiveView? It's not opinionated in any way, you can do whatever you want with it. It gives you extra features to remotely change pages but if you don't like having them you don't have to use them at all and can plug your favourite JS framework if you want to (or you can just use it for parts of the apps and not the rest if you want to).
I've worked for years with React and Angular and I don't really miss anything with a LiveView-based stack. LiveView features gives you 90% of what you want out of the box and for the rest it's fine having a bit of JS here and there to ensure a good experience.
What exactly are you thinking in terms of latency becoming an issue under LiveView but not on normal requests?
Do you mean when websites just need a full refresh because they lost their requests on some callback and no-one implemented recovery across the 5 levels of callbacks or something more specific?
Well with Liveview you go "full server state" for everything that you would normally just use plain JS for. For instance, toggling a checkbox or collapsing a div.
Having latency on such lowlevel interactions might make the UI feel sluggish as a whole.
Yeah certainly, but I'm not sure people are using it that way?
Most examples are to show cool stuff you can do, they're not production vetted. Like most JS examples out there don't really mean that people should be publishing live credentials with their bundles.
I imagine in most cases one would leave everything that is not behind a logged in status as normal routes/pages (signin, landing, contacts, etc). Or if not that those would be things requiring a socket/real-time interface anyway.
For the interactions, I don't think you even need to use alpine.js. Plain setup on DOMContentLoad, CSS Dropdowns/collapsibles that are replaced on JS load, proxying LiveView DOM/Morphdom events (if needed) so other components (even vue,react, etc) can listen to them, and CSS animations.
import { setup_live } from "./phx/setup_live.js";
import { setup_dropdowns } from "./interactivity/dropdowns.js";
import { setup_collapsibles } from "./interactivity/collapsibles.js";
import { setup_links } from "./interactivity/links.js";
import { setup_inputs } from "./interactivity/inputs.js";
function setup() {
setup_live();
setup_links();
setup_dropdowns();
setup_collapsibles();
setup_inputs();
}
document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", setup);
I went as far as having `onclick` handles and global window functions. Complete heresy. Yes, it's not 100% JS free, but it's pretty much low overhead.
Then LiveView is mostly for your admin dashboards and logged in users views, where it makes it pretty easy to do real-time feedback type of interactions/views and spa like navigation. Since you have proper auth and identification on the user, you can just log them off, rate-limit, block an account, and close their socket if needed.
From the top of my head not really, but this would depend on a few things:
- Is it a vendor lib ?
- It's not but is some particular file that is big enough to not make sense including on the root layout?
- It's neither, but functionality that can trigger multiple times and should be only once and only on those pages because it can conflict? or some variation of that?
I think they're all solvable but what makes sense will depend on those, but also on how you're using LiveView (is it LiveView only for logged-in users/some auth, can you set those on the live_view layout...)
But in some cases this is a problem also in spa's, where you have to use a snippet to check if the lib has been loaded, if not add a script tag to the body, or load it through js, etc...
Possibly many LiveView tech demos / projects by the community haven't had much thought into latency, but LiveView itself even contains a latency simulator[0] built-in. Additionally, it can toggle classes on elements when you click them and turn them off again when an acknowledgment has been received from the backend [1]. Finally you have the JS hooks, through which you can just implement any kind of loading indication you want on the frontend. So the tools are there, they just need to be used.
One trick I remember using (~two years ago, so early LV) when handling click events was to put everything async/not needed to reply in a spawn() function.
But yes as soon as you're on the internet you'll often feel the delay if your app is interactive.
The problem is that it's a bit random, because the network and the VM performances are never totally linear.
I remember implementing a countdown (using 1s send_after()) that would work fine most of the time, but sometimes there would be some hiccup and the countdown would stall just a bit and then process the counter in an accelerated fashion, which was terrible from a UI point of view, so in the end I did it in JS except for the update once the end reached.
It's all done on the server.