Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View andreisebastianc's full-sized avatar

Andrei Sebastian Cîmpean andreisebastianc

View GitHub Profile
@samselikoff
samselikoff / lib-style-group.js
Last active June 25, 2019 01:33
Sample Styled component using EmberMap's Styled mixin.
export default class StyleGroup {
constructor(styles) {
this.styles = styles;
this.name = ''; // must set at runtime
}
}
@mixonic
mixonic / readme.md
Last active August 15, 2024 15:15
Services for Glimmer.js

Setup

In config/environment.js:

// config/environment.js
'use strict';

/*
 * Mostly this is the stock module config.
@paulirish
paulirish / what-forces-layout.md
Last active May 16, 2025 17:21
What forces layout/reflow. The comprehensive list.

What forces layout / reflow

All of the below properties or methods, when requested/called in JavaScript, will trigger the browser to synchronously calculate the style and layout*. This is also called reflow or layout thrashing, and is common performance bottleneck.

Generally, all APIs that synchronously provide layout metrics will trigger forced reflow / layout. Read on for additional cases and details.

Element APIs

Getting box metrics
  • elem.offsetLeft, elem.offsetTop, elem.offsetWidth, elem.offsetHeight, elem.offsetParent
@paf31
paf31 / node-haskell.md
Last active May 14, 2024 03:51
Reimplementing a NodeJS Service in Haskell

Introduction

At DICOM Grid, we recently made the decision to use Haskell for some of our newer projects, mostly small, independent web services. This isn't the first time I've had the opportunity to use Haskell at work - I had previously used Haskell to write tools to automate some processes like generation of documentation for TypeScript code - but this is the first time we will be deploying Haskell code into production.

Over the past few months, I have been working on two Haskell services:

  • A reimplementation of an existing socket.io service, previously written for NodeJS using TypeScript.
  • A new service, which would interact with third-party components using standard data formats from the medical industry.

I will write here mostly about the first project, since it is a self-contained project which provides a good example of the power of Haskell. Moreover, the proces

@mlanett
mlanett / rails http status codes
Last active February 3, 2025 11:36
HTTP status code symbols for Rails
HTTP status code symbols for Rails
Thanks to Cody Fauser for this list of HTTP responce codes and their Ruby on Rails symbol mappings.
Status Code Symbol
1xx Informational
100 :continue
101 :switching_protocols
102 :processing
@staltz
staltz / introrx.md
Last active May 15, 2025 10:37
The introduction to Reactive Programming you've been missing
@tsiege
tsiege / The Technical Interview Cheat Sheet.md
Last active May 14, 2025 04:34
This is my technical interview cheat sheet. Feel free to fork it or do whatever you want with it. PLEASE let me know if there are any errors or if anything crucial is missing. I will add more links soon.

ANNOUNCEMENT

I have moved this over to the Tech Interview Cheat Sheet Repo and has been expanded and even has code challenges you can run and practice against!






\

@plentz
plentz / nginx.conf
Last active May 3, 2025 05:27
Best nginx configuration for improved security(and performance)
# to generate your dhparam.pem file, run in the terminal
openssl dhparam -out /etc/nginx/ssl/dhparam.pem 2048
@willurd
willurd / web-servers.md
Last active May 16, 2025 23:15
Big list of http static server one-liners

Each of these commands will run an ad hoc http static server in your current (or specified) directory, available at http://localhost:8000. Use this power wisely.

Discussion on reddit.

Python 2.x

$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
@adamwiggins
adamwiggins / adams-heroku-values.md
Last active November 27, 2024 17:06
My Heroku values

Make it real

Ideas are cheap. Make a prototype, sketch a CLI session, draw a wireframe. Discuss around concrete examples, not hand-waving abstractions. Don't say you did something, provide a URL that proves it.

Ship it

Nothing is real until it's being used by a real user. This doesn't mean you make a prototype in the morning and blog about it in the evening. It means you find one person you believe your product will help and try to get them to use it.

Do it with style