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The Art of Micro Frontends

You're reading from   The Art of Micro Frontends Build highly scalable, distributed web applications with multiple teams

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835460351
Length 356 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Florian Rappl Florian Rappl
Author Profile Icon Florian Rappl
Florian Rappl
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Table of Contents (27) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:The Hive – Introducing Frontend Modularization FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Why Micro Frontends? 3. Chapter 2: Common Challenges and Pitfalls 4. Chapter 3: Deployment Scenarios 5. Chapter 4: Domain Decomposition 6. Part 2: Dry Honey – Implementing Micro Frontend Architectures
7. Chapter 5: Types of Micro Frontend Architectures 8. Chapter 6: The Web Approach 9. Chapter 7: Server-Side Composition 10. Chapter 8: Edge-Side Composition 11. Chapter 9: Client-Side Composition 12. Chapter 10: SPA Composition 13. Chapter 11: Siteless UIs 14. Part 3: Bee Brood – Implementation Details
15. Chapter 12: Sharing Dependencies with Module Federation 16. Chapter 13: Isolating CSS 17. Chapter 14: Securing the Application 18. Chapter 15: Decoupling Using a Discovery Service 19. Part 4: Busy Bees – Scaling Organizations
20. Chapter 16: Preparing Teams and Stakeholders 21. Chapter 17: Dependency Management, Governance, and Security 22. Chapter 18: Impact of Micro Frontends on UX and Screen Design 23. Chapter 19: Building a Great Developer Experience 24. Chapter 20: Case Studies 25. Index 26. Other Books You May Enjoy

Avoiding hidden monoliths

Some micro frontend frameworks attempt to visually divide the UI, but that’s not how real applications work. In reality, an application is a blend of various parts from different subdomains, converging to create a cohesive whole. While these subdomains can be neatly separated conceptually, they often coalesce within the same layout elements for the end user.

Although some micro frontend frameworks attempt to segment the UI visually, this alone is often insufficient. Real applications require that backend logic and data flow are also segmented in alignment with the UI to avoid hidden monoliths.

Consider a web store: product details and order history may reside in separate subdomains, yet users expect coherence. They wouldn’t want to see just product IDs in their order history; they expect product names and relevant details. Consequently, these subdomains visually merge for the user.

Almost every subdomain contributes something to shared...

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