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Superforms 💥 🏆 Svelte Hack 2023 winner - Best library! 🏆 Superforms is a SvelteKit form library that brings you a comprehensive solution for server and client form validation. It supports a multitude of validation libraries: Pick your favorite, Superforms takes care of the rest with consistent handling of form data and validation errors, with full type safety. It works with both TypeScript and
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Johnny.Decimal is designed to help you find things quickly, with more confidence, and less stress. The problem In real life, if you stored your stuff in piles of badly-labelled boxes you’d never find anything again. If you put those boxes in boxes, in boxes, you’d never know which b
In the spirit of “everything old is new again,” browsers are once again supporting the ability to style the scrollbar. Much like custom CSS mouse cursors, I feel this is also a mistake. When you style things on the web, you get control over almost the entire experience. From ten thousand feet up, your scope of concern is this: The scope of concern for the browser is this: The browser’s UI is infor
Today we’re happy to announce Chrome for Testing, a new Chrome flavor that specifically targets web app testing and automation use cases. This article explains why the Chrome team felt this was needed, and walks through concrete examples where Chrome for Testing might benefit you as a developer. Background Browser testing is a vital component of creating a high-quality web experience, regardless o
At Shopify, we have spent the last year writing a new Ruby parser, which we’ve called YARP (Yet Another Ruby Parser). As of the date of this post, YARP can parse a semantically equivalent syntax tree to Ruby 3.3 on every Ruby file in Shopify’s main codebase, GitHub’s main codebase, CRuby, and the 100 most popular gems downloaded from rubygems.org. We recently got approval to merge this work into C
All the passkeys news not fit to print or film or whatever There wasn’t a lot of news about passkeys at WWDC23. And in fact I had to go digging to find more than the single passkeys-specific “Deploy passkeys at work” video available on the Apple Developer app: Last week I managed to glean more insights into Apple’s continuing evolution of their passkeys support from other places online, though, so
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