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A curated list by Eric Elliott and friends. Suggest links at the original in the comments section or in the website incarnation.
This fork includes screen-captures of the websites, self-descriptions (which appear within quotation marks) from those sites and some metadata like publication date and GitHub stars and forks. It also may lag behind the original as new links are added there. Commentary is almost entirely from Eric Elliott’s original gist: a few summary descriptions were added for sites that omit capsule descriptions.
Help us turn this into a proper website!
This is a very exclusive collection of only must-have JavaScript links. I'm only listing my favorite links. Nothing else makes the cut. Feel free to suggest links if you think they're good
Journey into writing code that is readable, understandable ,maintainable and testable as well as how to prepare codebase to embrace future changes.
I wonder from time to time whether I'm doing the right thing with respect to guidelines and principles when using an object-oriented programming approach to create application. I started reading Object Design Style Guide book last year to learn more about objects. And beginning this year, I decided to delve deeper into writing code that is readable, understandable and maintainable as well as how to prepare codebase to embrace future changes.
Here are the resources used:
Book
- Object Design Style Guide:
- Principles of Package Design
Pluralsight Courses
- Writing Readable and Maintainable Code
I've been deceiving you all. I had you believe that Svelte was a UI framework — unlike React and Vue etc, because it shifts work out of the client and into the compiler, but a framework nonetheless.
But that's not exactly accurate. In my defense, I didn't realise it myself until very recently. But with Svelte 3 around the corner, it's time to come clean about what Svelte really is.
Svelte is a language.
Specifically, Svelte is an attempt to answer a question that many people have asked, and a few have answered: what would it look like if we had a language for describing reactive user interfaces?
A few projects that have answered this question:
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