Google Sheets is not as versatile as I thought
Google Sheets comes with everything you need, until it doesn't
A collection of articles tagged with Google on my blog!
Google Sheets comes with everything you need, until it doesn't
If Google Forms and Sheets are not enough, Quasar Framework is your best bet.
I’m consistently blown away by how ergonomic and beautiful Quasar’s pre-built components are. They’re also based off the Material Design specification, which makes them very similar to Google Forms and Google Sheets.
It is much faster to build a facsimile to Google Forms with Quasar than it is to build it with TailwindCSS. And at the end of the day, you have to ship.
For a lot of use cases, a Google Sheet is all you need.
You may think that you need:
but often, you can use just a Google Form with a Google Sheet and it’s more than enough.
A Google Sheet includes (almost) everything you need. It includes robust methods to display your data. It comes with built-in filtering functions and sorting options. It even has Google Apps Script (shoutout to my script to copy a Supabase Table into a Google Sheet), which you could schedule like cron jobs, all without the headache of setting up cron jobs for yourselves. Many of these features are built-in, which saves you time and effort compared to creating your own table and styling it from scratch. These features truly are, for most people, good enough.
But perhaps most importantly of all, beyond features, Google Forms and Sheets are accessible. Everyone has used Google Forms and Sheets already. You do not need to worry about building your user interfaced from scratch using intuitive design principles, so that users can figure out how to use it when encountering it for the first time.
Think about all of the time wasted where people spend hours making dashboards and efficient ways to display their data. It’s already been solved before.
Do you really need to differentiate yourself through your user interface?
For a lot of use cases, a Google Sheet is all you need.
You may think that you need:
but often, you can use just a Google Form with a Google Sheet and it’s more than enough.
A Google Sheet includes (almost) everything you need. It includes robust methods to display your data. It comes with built-in filtering functions and sorting options. It even has Google Apps Script (shoutout to my script to copy a Supabase Table into a Google Sheet), which you could schedule like cron jobs, all without the headache of setting up cron jobs for yourselves. Many of these features are built-in, which saves you time and effort compared to creating your own table and styling it from scratch. These features truly are, for most people, good enough.
But perhaps most importantly of all, beyond features, Google Forms and Sheets are accessible. Everyone has used Google Forms and Sheets already. You do not need to worry about building your user interfaced from scratch using intuitive design principles, so that users can figure out how to use it when encountering it for the first time.
Think about all of the time wasted where people spend hours making dashboards and efficient ways to display their data. It’s already been solved before.
Do you really need to differentiate yourself through your user interface?
Google Sheets comes with everything you need, until it doesn't
If Google Forms and Sheets are not enough, Quasar Framework is your best bet.
I’m consistently blown away by how ergonomic and beautiful Quasar’s pre-built components are. They’re also based off the Material Design specification, which makes them very similar to Google Forms and Google Sheets.
It is much faster to build a facsimile to Google Forms with Quasar than it is to build it with TailwindCSS. And at the end of the day, you have to ship.