Welcome to The 7th Annual StackShare Awards! 🎉 (Check out the 2019 awards if you missed them). This year we analyzed over eight million data points shared by you- the StackShare community- to bring you these rankings 🔥 If this is your first time seeing the StackShare Awards, get comfy, you're gonna be here a while 😏 ICYMI: StackShare Enterprise - is now available for FREE in the GitHub Marketpl
Tao of React - Software Design, Architecture & Best PracticesJanuary 18, 2021 • 25 minute read I’ve been working with React since 2016 and still there isn’t a single best practice when it comes to application structure and design. While there are best practices on the micro level, most teams build their own “thing” when it comes to architecture. Of course, there isn’t a universal best practice tha
When to use HTTPS for local development Stay organized with collections Save and categorize content based on your preferences. Using http://localhost for local development is fine most of the time, except in some special cases. This post explains when you need to run your local development site with HTTPS. Also see: How to use HTTPS for local development. In this post, statements about localhost a
Use HTTPS for local development Stay organized with collections Save and categorize content based on your preferences. Most of the time, http://localhost behaves like HTTPS for development purposes. However, there are some special cases, such as custom hostnames or using secure cookies across browsers, where you need to explicitly set up your development site to behave like HTTPS to accurately rep
WebRTC is now a W3C and IETF standard Stay organized with collections Save and categorize content based on your preferences. A brief overview of the history, architecture, use cases, and future of WebRTC. The process of defining a web standard is a lengthy process that ensures usefulness, consistency and compatibility across browsers. Today the W3C and IETF mark the completion of perhaps one of th
CrateDB Doubling Down on Permissive Licensing and the Elasticsearch Lockdown TL;DR Crate.io will: no longer use Elastic’s Elasticsearch as an upstream project for CrateDB and will switch to a fork open source its entire codebase under the APLv2 with CrateDB 4.5 As you might already know, CrateDB relies on Elasticsearch code for its inner workings. A few days ago Elastic announced that they closed
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