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@pudquick
pudquick / brew.md
Last active April 6, 2024 21:42
Lightly "sandboxed" homebrew on macOS

brew is a bad neighbor

This isn't a guide about locking down homebrew so that it can't touch the rest of your system security-wise.

This guide doesn't fix the inherent security issues of a package management system that will literally yell at you if you try to do something about "huh, maybe it's not great my executables are writeable by my account without requiring authorization first".

But it absolutely is a guide about shoving it into its own little corner so that you can take it or leave it as you see fit, instead of just letting the project do what it likes like completely taking over permissions and ownership of a directory that might be in use by other software on your Mac and stomping all over their contents.

By following this guide you will:

  • Never have to run sudo to forcefully change permissions of some directory to be owned by your account
@souporserious
souporserious / build.mjs
Created February 24, 2022 02:48
Build script using esbuild and ts-morph to bundle library code.
import glob from 'fast-glob'
import { build } from 'esbuild'
import { Project } from 'ts-morph'
const project = new Project({
compilerOptions: {
outDir: 'dist',
emitDeclarationOnly: true,
},
tsConfigFilePath: './tsconfig.json',
@sindresorhus
sindresorhus / esm-package.md
Last active May 8, 2024 22:50
Pure ESM package

Pure ESM package

The package that linked you here is now pure ESM. It cannot be require()'d from CommonJS.

This means you have the following choices:

  1. Use ESM yourself. (preferred)
    Use import foo from 'foo' instead of const foo = require('foo') to import the package. You also need to put "type": "module" in your package.json and more. Follow the below guide.
  2. If the package is used in an async context, you could use await import(…) from CommonJS instead of require(…).
  3. Stay on the existing version of the package until you can move to ESM.
@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

@shilman
shilman / storybook-controls-typescript-walkthrough.md
Last active May 22, 2022 06:49
Storybook Controls Walkthrough

Storybook Controls w/ CRA & TypeScript

This is a quick-and-dirty walkthrough to set up a fresh project with Storybook Controls. It's also an introduction to Storybook Args, which is a major update to Storybook's Component Story Format (CSF): a more portable and ergonomic way to write stories.

This walkthrough gives you:

  • Auto-generated controls in the addons panel
  • Auto-generated controls in your Docs
  • Auto-generated actions for event logging
  • An introduction to the future of CSF
@IanColdwater
IanColdwater / twittermute.txt
Last active April 22, 2024 17:26
Here are some terms to mute on Twitter to clean your timeline up a bit.
Mute these words in your settings here: https://twitter.com/settings/muted_keywords
ActivityTweet
generic_activity_highlights
generic_activity_momentsbreaking
RankedOrganicTweet
suggest_activity
suggest_activity_feed
suggest_activity_highlights
suggest_activity_tweet

Clean-Architecture

Notes, comments and errata on Robert C. Martin's Clean Architecture

Reading the book

The book has 34 chapters, with a maximum of 22 pages (chapter 14). Even while involved as a programmer in a project, it should be possible to read one chapter per day, so you can finish the book in about 2 months.

Errata

@argyleink
argyleink / easings.css
Created February 26, 2018 22:34
Handy CSS properties for easing functions
:root {
--ease-in-quad: cubic-bezier(0.55, 0.085, 0.68, 0.53);
--ease-in-cubic: cubic-bezier(0.55, 0.055, 0.675, 0.19);
--ease-in-quart: cubic-bezier(0.895, 0.03, 0.685, 0.22);
--ease-in-quint: cubic-bezier(0.755, 0.05, 0.855, 0.06);
--ease-in-expo: cubic-bezier(0.95, 0.05, 0.795, 0.035);
--ease-in-circ: cubic-bezier(0.6, 0.04, 0.98, 0.335);
--ease-out-quad: cubic-bezier(0.25, 0.46, 0.45, 0.94);
--ease-out-cubic: cubic-bezier(0.215, 0.61, 0.355, 1);
--ease-out-quart: cubic-bezier(0.165, 0.84, 0.44, 1);
@dikiaap
dikiaap / git-io-custom-url.md
Last active May 7, 2024 17:34
git.io custom URL

Update: As of 11 January 2022, git.io no longer accepts new URLs.

Command:

curl https://git.io/ -i -F "url=https://github.com/YOUR_GITHUB_URL" -F "code=YOUR_CUSTOM_NAME"

URLs that can be created is from:

  • https://github.com/*
  • https://*.github.com
@ygrenzinger
ygrenzinger / CleanArchitecture.md
Last active March 31, 2024 13:57
Summary of Clean Architecture by Robert C. Martin

Summary of book "Clean Architecture" by Robert C. Martin

Uncle Bob, the well known author of Clean Code, is coming back to us with a new book called Clean Architecture which wants to take a larger view on how to create software.

Even if Clean Code is one of the major book around OOP and code design (mainly by presenting the SOLID principles), I was not totally impressed by the book.

Clean Architecture leaves me with the same feeling, even if it's pushing the development world to do better, has some good stories and present robust principles to build software.

The book is build around 34 chapters organised in chapters.