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@dethi
dethi / unused-files.sh
Last active April 25, 2022 05:34
create-react-app: find files not used in the app bundle, i.e. unused source code
#!/bin/bash
# Launch inside a create-react-app project after building the production build.
# Require `jq`.
diff \
<(find src -type f \( -name '*.js' -o -name '*.jsx' -o -name '*.css' \) | sort) \
<(cat build/**/*.map | jq --raw-output '.sources | join("\n")' \
| grep -v '\.\./' | grep -E '\.(js|jsx|css)$' \
| sed "s#^#src/#" | sort | uniq) \
module.exports = {
env: {
browser: true,
es6: true,
jest: true,
},
extends: [
'react-app',
'airbnb',
'plugin:@typescript-eslint/recommended',
@tannerlinsley
tannerlinsley / README.md
Last active April 12, 2024 17:04
Replacing Create React App with the Next.js CLI

Replacing Create React App with the Next.js CLI

How dare you make a jab at Create React App!?

Firstly, Create React App is good. But it's a very rigid CLI, primarily designed for projects that require very little to no configuration. This makes it great for beginners and simple projects but unfortunately, this means that it's pretty non-extensible. Despite the involvement from big names and a ton of great devs, it has left me wanting a much better developer experience with a lot more polish when it comes to hot reloading, babel configuration, webpack configuration, etc. It's definitely simple and good, but not amazing.

Now, compare that experience to Next.js which for starters has a much larger team behind it provided by a world-class company (Vercel) who are all financially dedicated to making it the best DX you could imagine to build any React application. Next.js is the 💣-diggity. It has amazing docs, great support, can grow with your requirements into SSR or static site generation, etc.

So why

@GetVladimir
GetVladimir / Force-RGB-Color-on-M1-Mac.md
Last active May 5, 2025 05:05
Force RGB Color on M1 Mac

Force RGB Color on M1 Mac

How to Force RGB Color Output instead of YPbPr on your M1 Apple Silicon Mac for an External Monitor.

This step-by-step video tutorial will guide you through the procedure of forcing RGB color output on your M1 Mac.

Force RGB Color on M1 Mac

Here is the direct link to the video tutorial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1EqH3fd0V4

The video also has Closed Captions (Subtitles) that you can enable, to make it easier to follow if needed.