Feels off to be putting a lot of presentation logic into new .nue files. Maybe I've just grown used to .tsx and Angular's LSP consuming html templates and giving me full intellisense, but I wouldn't trade that for a smaller bundle size. If I really wanted to optimize for bundle size, I'd probably just server side render tsx templates, or whatever built-in templating language my backend language has, eg. Razor for .NET.
Nevertheless, I have to agree with the a lot of the other commenters, I would have loved a concrete example front and center, I have to chip into the chior of people dismissing the initial importance of bundle size. I'm also sure a big application written with this library will be able to balloon once you begin using dependencies not optimized for this library.
Generally speaking it's my experience that a lot of frontend libraries unfortunately tend to crumple once the long tail has been reached.
I'll be honest, my postulate is based on 100% anecdata. But in my experience the least opinionated frameworks, tend to crumble the most. I've heard countless stories about React apps where you'll have to use loads of third party frameworks, where each one has the potential to stop being maintained. In the end I guess this boils down to risk management, some teams might prefer not having a single point of failure with the trade offs that the looser coupling comes with.
In my own experience when encountering old Angular applications, there's been a straight forward migration path to the latest versions, that feature in it self is pure gold in my opinion.
Nevertheless, I have to agree with the a lot of the other commenters, I would have loved a concrete example front and center, I have to chip into the chior of people dismissing the initial importance of bundle size. I'm also sure a big application written with this library will be able to balloon once you begin using dependencies not optimized for this library.
Generally speaking it's my experience that a lot of frontend libraries unfortunately tend to crumple once the long tail has been reached.