#Nova 4.0 + Livewire 2.0 (Laravel 10.x)

9 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)

lusty fern
#

Is there a way to integrate livewire with Nova 4.x? I'm trying to avoid Vue components... Thanks.

little fern
#

I am not a Nova user, so my answer is an educated guess. Nova comes with some inbuilt components - and these are likely to be Vue components. To switch entirely to Livewire would IMO likely be an extensive change, and I wouldn't bother trying.

I would hope that there is nothing stopping you from using Vue in Nova and Livewire in your front end. Obviously if you already have significant development of Nova-based functionality, you are probably stuck with it, but if not you might want to switch to Filament as an alternative Admin Panel as this is Livewire based.

lusty fern
# little fern I am not a Nova user, so my answer is an educated guess. Nova comes with some in...

Thank you for your response. This is something new for our team (and me)... Now is the time to set the rules! Our challenge is the lack of knowledge with JS (and Web development persé - but I'm comfortable with Laravel & Nova). So, when I found out about Livewire, I'm guessing that we would want to stick with it instead of VueJS / React or other JS frameworks.

So far, I think we are heading to Laravel, Jetstream (frontend), Livewire for PHP - Interactive components, ... and I guess Filament (hopefully works for us).

Do you know any other TALL alternatives to Filament? Just to have options.

Thank you again!

P.S: Would be interesting if Nova integrates Laravel Volt (single-file Livewire components... just like Vue)

little fern
#

I am at the beginning (relatively speaking) of my Laravel journey. I have recently been considering whether to use Livewire, or Inertia + Vue or Inertia + Splade, and have decided to go with Livewire unless it proves to be inadequate.

I am sorry, but I don't know about TALL alternatives to Filament - but that is a good thing I think. Whatever technologies you choose need to have support now (i.e. a sizeable user base) and support in the future (i.e. a good community or long-term developers). Nova has Laravel itself behind it, Filament has a sizeable community, Voyager has passed its prime - and I am not aware of any other Admin panels that have the same level of usage and support. But a google search for "livewire" "admin" will undoubtedly find some I haven't looked at.

hushed stone
abstract sedge
lusty fern
lusty fern