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// create a bookmark and use this code as the URL, you can now toggle the css on/off
// thanks+credit: https://dev.to/gajus/my-favorite-css-hack-32g3
javascript: (function() {
var domStyle = document.createElement("style");
domStyle.append(
'* { color:#0f0!important;outline:solid #f00 1px!important; background-color: rgba(255,0,0,.2) !important; }\
* * { background-color: rgba(0,255,0,.2) !important; }\
* * * { background-color: rgba(0,0,255,.2) !important; }\
* * * * { background-color: rgba(255,0,255,.2) !important; }\
* * * * * { background-color: rgba(0,255,255,.2) !important; }\
// create a bookmark and use this code as the URL, you can now toggle the css on/off
// thanks+credit: https://dev.to/gajus/my-favorite-css-hack-32g3
javascript: (function() {
var styleEl = document.getElementById('css-layout-hack');
if (styleEl) {
styleEl.remove();
return;
}
styleEl = document.createElement('style');
styleEl.id = 'css-layout-hack';
@bvaughn
bvaughn / index.md
Last active April 3, 2024 07:41
Interaction tracing with React

This API was removed in React 17


Interaction tracing with React

React recently introduced an experimental profiler API. After discussing this API with several teams at Facebook, one common piece of feedback was that the performance information would be more useful if it could be associated with the events that caused the application to render (e.g. button click, XHR response). Tracing these events (or "interactions") would enable more powerful tooling to be built around the timing information, capable of answering questions like "What caused this really slow commit?" or "How long does it typically take for this interaction to update the DOM?".

With version 16.4.3, React added experimental support for this tracing by way of a new NPM package, scheduler. However the public API for this package is not yet finalized and will likely change with upcoming minor releases, so it should be used with caution.

@zcaceres
zcaceres / Eyeballing-This.md
Last active August 17, 2023 23:38
Understanding Binding and 'this' in Javascript by zach.dev

How to Eyeball Your ‘This’ Context in Javascript

The early programmer struggles with the Javascript keyword this. But understanding your this context is easier than it seems.

This is all about where a function is invoked. Often, early programmers worry about where the function was declared. Perhaps the function was declared in a specific file or a particular object. Surely this changes it's this!

Nope.

@yiboyang
yiboyang / git_bash_here.ahk
Last active March 3, 2024 08:44
Git bash here in Windows Explorer with Ctrl + Alt + T
;
; AutoHotkey Version: 1.1
; Language: English
; Platform: Win9x/NT
; Author: Yibo
;
; Script Function:
; Define the shortcut Ctrl + Alt + T for launching Git bash in current folder in Windows Explorer
;
@AllThingsSmitty
AllThingsSmitty / js-terms.md
Last active April 21, 2023 04:21
10 terms to help you better understand JavaScript

10 JavaScript Terms You Should Know

From currying to closures there are quite a number of special words used in JavaScript. These will not only help you increase your vocabulary but also better understand JavaScript. Special terms are normally found in documentation and technical articles. But some of them like closures are pretty standard things to know about. Knowing what the word itself means can help you know the concept it's named for better.

  1. Arity
  2. Anonymous
  3. Closure
  4. Currying
  5. Hoisting
  6. Mutation