Now that WebAssembly is available as an (experimental) compilation target, 
it raises the question of how feasible is it to make a quality UI library. 
Vue (my personal fav) and React, while they have their issues, do have many 
ideas which are good and seem like they may translate well over to 
WebAssembly.

Here's a working experimental Vue-like UI library with tools to write UI 
components in .vugu files (similar in concept to .vue files): 
https://github.com/vugu/vugu; Getting Started page: 
http://www.vugu.org/doc/start

HTML with logic in it gets code generated to .go files.  In-browser 
rendering in wasm  with DOM sync as well as static HTML output are 
implemented.

And this is my cheesy bullet-pointed list that makes it sound a lot more 
mature than it is:

* Runs in-browser using WebAssembly
* Single-file components
* Vue-like markup syntax
* Write idiomatic Go code
* Rapid prototyping
* ~3 minute setup
* Standard Go build tools

I'm curious what people think of the approach and ideas for improvement.

--brad

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