Backstory: I decided to crowdsource static site generator recommendations, so the following are actual real world suggested-to-me results. I then took those and sorted them by language/server and, just for a decent relative metric, their Github Watcher count. If you want a heap of other projects (including other languages like Haskell and Python) Nanoc has the mother of all site generator lists. If you recommend another one, by all means add a comment.
#!/usr/bin/env ruby | |
# An HTTP/HTTPS/FTP file downloader library/CLI based upon MiniPortile's | |
# HTTP implementation. | |
# | |
# Author: Jon Maken | |
# License: 3-clause BSD | |
# Revision: 2012-03-25 23:01:19 -0600 | |
require 'net/http' | |
require 'net/https' if RUBY_VERSION < '1.9' |
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.
$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
const MODULE_DIR = /(.*([\/\\]node_modules|\.\.)[\/\\](@[^\/\\]+[\/\\])?[^\/\\]+)([\/\\].*)?$/g; | |
{ | |
loader: 'babel-loader', | |
test: /\.jsx?$/, | |
include(filepath) { | |
if (filepath.split(/[/\\]/).indexOf('node_modules')===-1) return true; | |
let pkg, manifest = path.resolve(filepath.replace(MODULE_DIR, '$1'), 'package.json'); | |
try { pkg = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync(manifest)); } catch (e) {} | |
return !!(pkg.module || pkg['jsnext:main']); |
Disclaimer: Многие доклады смотрелись и отчёты писались в поезде, спать хотелось капец.
Disclaimer 2: Если что, простите за орфорграфию.
Вступление, в основном - нудное бла, бла, бла. Из достижений - 547,138 ReactDevTools installed on Chrome. Тем кто териториально недалеко от San Francisco Bay Area может быть интересно, что FB проводит открытые митапы - ReactWednesday.
Докладчик харизматичный, слушать его приятно.
This is a CFP for the ⚡️Lightning⚡️ talk at awesome ReactiveConf 2017. If you'd like to see this talk, please 🌟 star🌟 this summary and retweet my tweet 🙂 #ReactiveConf
Functional reactive programming (FRP) is very popular nowadays. The JavaScript community provides us with excellent tools like RxJS, Bacon, and Kefir. But, as we know, they have nothing to do with React. So how we can use the power of FRP in our React application? Using the correct state management, we can make friends with FRP and React and make our application truly reactive. In my lightning talk, I will talk about Focal
The proposal you’re about to read is not just a proposal. We have a working implementation of almost everything we discussed here. We encourage you to checkout and build our branch: our fork, with the relevant branch selected. Building and using the implementation will give you a better understanding of what using it as a developer is like.
Our implementation ended up differing from the proposal on some minor points. As our last action item before making a PR, we’re writing documentation on what we did. While I loathe pointing to tests in lieu of documentation, they will be helpful until we complete writing docs: the unit tests.
This repo also contains a bundled version of npm that has a new command, asset
. You can read the documentation for and goals of that comma
Update: See https://github.com/muan/details-on-details instead.
I did a talk at Brooklyn JS called Details on <details>
on 2018/07/19. I have way more details prepared than the ones that fit in the slides, so here's the real details on <details>
. ❤️
– @muan
import * as t from 'io-ts' | |
import * as React from 'react' | |
import { render } from 'react-dom' | |
type Field = t.StringType | t.NumberType | t.BooleanType | |
interface Form extends t.InterfaceType<{ [key: string]: Field }> {} | |
const toReactElement = (f: Form | Field): React.ReactElement<any> => { | |
// f is a tagged union | |
switch (f._tag) { |
GraphQL document is parsed:
- Lexer: https://github.com/absinthe-graphql/absinthe/blob/master/lib/absinthe/lexer.ex
- Parser (Yecc): https://github.com/absinthe-graphql/absinthe/blob/master/src/absinthe_parser.yrl
This returns a tree of Absinthe.Language nodes (structs), effectively the AST:
This tree is converted to a tree of Absinthe.Blueprint nodes (structs):