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  • Google TypeScript Style Guide

    // Good: choose between two options as appropriate (see below). import * as ng from '@angular/core'; import {Foo} from './foo'; // Only when needed: default imports. import Button from 'Button'; // Sometimes needed to import libraries for their side effects: import 'jasmine'; import '@polymer/paper-button'; Import paths TypeScript code must use paths to import other TypeScript code. Paths may be r

    • GitHub - modelcontextprotocol/servers: Model Context Protocol Servers

      Official integrations are maintained by companies building production ready MCP servers for their platforms. 21st.dev Magic - Create crafted UI components inspired by the best 21st.dev design engineers. ActionKit by Paragon - Connect to 130+ SaaS integrations (e.g. Slack, Salesforce, Gmail) with Paragon’s ActionKit API. Adfin - The only platform you need to get paid - all payments in one place, in

        GitHub - modelcontextprotocol/servers: Model Context Protocol Servers
      • An Opinionated Guide to xargs

        Preliminaries What Is xargs? It's an adapter between text streams and argv arrays, two essential concepts in shell. You pass it flags that specify how to split stdin. Then it generates arguments and invokes processes. Example: $ echo 'alice bob' | xargs -n 1 -- echo hi hi alice hi bob What's happening here? xargs splits the input stream on whitespace, producing 2 arguments, alice and bob. We passe

        • LogLog Games

          The article is also available in Chinese. Disclaimer: This post is a very long collection of thoughts and problems I've had over the years, and also addresses some of the arguments I've been repeatedly told. This post expresses my opinion the has been formed over using Rust for gamedev for many thousands of hours over many years, and multiple finished games. This isn't meant to brag or indicate su

          • Sublime Text 4

            The first stable release of Sublime Text 4 has finally arrived! We've worked hard on providing improvements without losing focus on what makes Sublime Text great. There are some new major features that we hope will significantly improve your workflow and a countless number of minor improvements across the board. A huge thanks goes out to all the beta testers on discord and all the contributors to

              Sublime Text 4
            • WebKit Features in Safari 17.4

              ContentsArchitectural improvementsWeb AppsForm elementsCSSWeb APIJavaScriptMediaSVGWebGLWeb AssemblyWeb InspectorChanges to SafariSafari ExtensionsWeb AuthenticationBug Fixes and moreUpdating to Safari 17.4Feedback Just like Safari 15.4 and Safari 16.4, this March’s release of Safari 17.4 is a significant one for web developers. We’re proud to announce another 46 features and 146 bug fixes. You ca

                WebKit Features in Safari 17.4
              • Why Rust strings seem hard | Brandon's Website

                Why Rust strings seem hard April 13, 2021 Lately I've been seeing lots of anecdotes from people trying to get into Rust who get really hung up on strings (&str, String, and their relationship). Beyond Rust's usual challenges around ownership, there can be an added layer of frustration because strings are so easy in the great majority of languages. You just add them together, split them, whatever!

                • WebKit Features in Safari 18.0

                  ContentsNew in Safari 18Web apps for MacCSSSpatial WebHTMLJavaScriptWeb APICanvasManaged Media SourceWebRTCHTTPSWebGLWeb InspectorPasskeysSafari ExtensionsApple PayDeprecationsBug Fixes and moreUpdating to Safari 18.0Feedback Safari 18.0 is here. Along with iOS 18, iPadOS 18, macOS Sequoia and visionOS 2, today is the day another 53 web platform features, as well as 25 deprecations and 209 resolve

                    WebKit Features in Safari 18.0
                  • ESLint v9.0.0 released - ESLint - Pluggable JavaScript Linter

                    Highlights This is a summary of the significant changes, both breaking and non-breaking, you need to know about when upgrading from ESLint v8.x to ESLint v9.0.0. Installing Because this is a major release, you may not automatically be upgraded by npm. To ensure you are using this version, run: npm i eslint@9.0.0 --save-dev Copy code to clipboard Migration Guide As there are a lot of changes, we’ve

                      ESLint v9.0.0 released - ESLint - Pluggable JavaScript Linter
                    • The Ultimate Interactive JQ Guide

                      The Ultimate Interactive JQ Guide Learn how to search, query, and modify JSON data with 25 interactive jq examples and explanations Cover Photo by Pixabay Has this ever happened to you? You’ve just received a massive JSON file that looks like it was designed to confuse you. Or maybe you entered a command, and you got so much JSON that it looks incomprehensible. Important: Level up your jq skills w

                        The Ultimate Interactive JQ Guide
                      • python_modules.pdf

                        Python3 OpenCV / Pillow / pygame / Eel / PyDub / NumPy / matplotlib / SciPy / SymPy / gmpy2 / hashlib, passlib / Cython / Numba / ctypes / PyInstaller / curses / tqdm / JupyterLab / json / psutil / urllib / zenhan / jaconv Copyright © 2017-2025, Katsunori Nakamura 2025 8 19 Python ‘ .py’ Python Python Windows PSF Python py .py Enter macOS Linux PSF Python python3 .py Enter Anaconda Prompt Python p

                        • The ultimate JavaScript regex guide

                          The string is arguably the most essential data type in programming — every programming language and software in the world uses strings in one way or another. It enables humans to easily communicate with sophisticated programs and machines. One thing that would help you a lot as a programmer is understanding how to use and manipulate strings so that you can build programs users love. Regular expres

                            The ultimate JavaScript regex guide
                          • WebKit Features in Safari 17.2

                            ContentsHTMLCSSImages and videoJavaScriptWeb APIWeb AppsWebGLPrivacyWeb InspectorFixes for Interop 2023 and moreUpdating to Safari 17.2Feedback Web technology is constantly moving forward, with both big new features and small subtle adjustments. Nowadays, web developers expect web browsers to update multiple times a year, instead of the once or twice a year typical of the late 2000s — or the once

                              WebKit Features in Safari 17.2
                            • News from WWDC24: WebKit in Safari 18 beta

                              Jun 10, 2024 by Jen Simmons, Jon Davis, Karl Dubost, Anne van Kesteren, Marcos Cáceres, Ada Rose Canon, Tim Nguyen, Sanjana Aithal, Pascoe, and Garrett Davidson ContentsWebXRCSSWeb apps for MacSafari ExtensionsSpatial mediaHTMLMediaWebRTCPasskeysHTTPSJavaScriptWeb APICanvasWebGLWeb InspectorWKWebViewApple PayDeprecationsBug Fixes and moreHelp us Beta TestFeedback The last year has been a great one

                                News from WWDC24: WebKit in Safari 18 beta
                              • JEP 425: Virtual Threads (Preview)

                                Summary Introduce virtual threads to the Java Platform. Virtual threads are lightweight threads that dramatically reduce the effort of writing, maintaining, and observing high-throughput concurrent applications. This is a preview API. Goals Enable server applications written in the simple thread-per-request style to scale with near-optimal hardware utilization. Enable existing code that uses the j

                                • ECMAScript proposal: RegExp flag `/v` makes character classes and character class escapes more powerful

                                  ECMAScript proposal: RegExp flag /v makes character classes and character class escapes more powerful In this blog post, we look at the ECMAScript proposal “RegExp v flag with set notation + properties of strings” by Markus Scherer and Mathias Bynens. The new flag /v  # The proposed new regular expression flag /v (.unicodeSets) enables three features: Support for multi-code-point graphemes (such a

                                  • Speeding up the JavaScript ecosystem - eslint

                                    We've talked quite a bit about linting in the past two posts of this series, so I thought it's time to give eslint the proper limelight it deserves. Overall eslint is so flexible, that you can even swap out the parser for a completely different one. That's not a rare scenario either as with the rise of JSX and TypeScript that is frequently done. Enriched by a healthy ecosystem of plugins and prese

                                      Speeding up the JavaScript ecosystem - eslint
                                    • prompts.chat

                                      Welcome to the “Awesome ChatGPT Prompts” repository! While this collection was originally created for ChatGPT, these prompts work great with other AI models like Claude, Gemini, Hugging Face Chat, Llama, Mistral, and more. ChatGPT is a web interface created by OpenAI that provides access to their GPT (Generative Pre-trained Transformer) language models. The underlying models, like GPT-4o and GPT-o

                                      • Unicode is harder than you think · mcilloni's blog

                                        Reading the excellent article by JeanHeyd Meneide on how broken string encoding in C/C++ is made me realise that Unicode is a topic that is often overlooked by a large number of developers. In my experience, there’s a lot of confusion and wrong expectations on what Unicode is, and what best practices to follow when dealing with strings that may contain characters outside of the ASCII range. This a

                                        • A Tour of WebAuthn

                                          This book was distributed at the FIDO Authenticate conference in 2024. Its intended format was as a PDF, which you can find here. The following is the contents of the PDF converted to HTML. 1: Introduction Passwords are rubbish. If you’re reading this book then hopefully you’re already on board with this idea, but let’s recap anyway. The typical practice with passwords is to remember a few differe

                                          • Google TypeScript Style Guide

                                            // Good: choose between two options as appropriate (see below). import * as ng from '@angular/core'; import {Foo} from './foo'; // Only when needed: default imports. import Button from 'Button'; // Sometimes needed to import libraries for their side effects: import 'jasmine'; import '@polymer/paper-button'; Import paths TypeScript code must use paths to import other TypeScript code. Paths may be r

                                            • Large Text Compression Benchmark

                                               Large Text Compression Benchmark Matt Mahoney Last update: July 3, 2025. history This competition ranks lossless data compression programs by the compressed size (including the size of the decompression program) of the first 109 bytes of the XML text dump of the English version of Wikipedia on Mar. 3, 2006. About the test data. The goal of this benchmark is not to find the best overall compressi

                                              • Understanding Memory Management, Part 1: C

                                                UPDATED: 2025-02-15: Fixed some bugs in the examples and pointed out that you don't usually just want to panic on memory allocation failure. I've been writing a lot of Rust recently, and as anyone who has learned Rust can tell you, a huge part of the process of learning Rust is learning to work within its restrictive memory model, which forbids many operations that would be perfectly legal in eith

                                                  Understanding Memory Management, Part 1: C
                                                • Optimizing Ruby’s JSON, Part 3

                                                  In the previous post, I covered how I reimplemented JSON::Generator::State#configure in Ruby and some other changes. Unfortunately, it didn’t go as well as I initially thought. Mistakes Were Made The default gems that ship with Ruby are automatically copied inside ruby/ruby’s repo. In short, there’s a bot aptly named matzbot, that replicates all the commits from the various ruby/* gems, inside rub

                                                  • GitHub - ComfyUI-Workflow/awesome-comfyui: A collection of awesome custom nodes for ComfyUI

                                                    ComfyUI-Gemini_Flash_2.0_Exp (⭐+172): A ComfyUI custom node that integrates Google's Gemini Flash 2.0 Experimental model, enabling multimodal analysis of text, images, video frames, and audio directly within ComfyUI workflows. ComfyUI-ACE_Plus (⭐+115): Custom nodes for various visual generation and editing tasks using ACE_Plus FFT Model. ComfyUI-Manager (⭐+113): ComfyUI-Manager itself is also a cu

                                                      GitHub - ComfyUI-Workflow/awesome-comfyui: A collection of awesome custom nodes for ComfyUI
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