Awesome-Design-Tools
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Awesome-Design-Tools | infer | |
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12 | 42 | |
31,728 | 14,688 | |
1.5% | 0.5% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
24 days ago | 6 days ago | |
JavaScript | OCaml | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Awesome-Design-Tools
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Suggestions for new Awesome Design Tools
I'm a big fan of curated lists and resources, and a great example of that is GitHub's awesome lists but I've noticed there seems to be a lack of any art focused that isn't specific to one software (such as Awesome Blender) or that are actively maintained, the closest being https://github.com/goabstract/Awesome-Design-Tools, which, although still quite helpful today, hasn't been updated in 3 or 4 years since Flawless Apps joined the Abstract team, so contains many broken links and there are plenty of new and useful options that aren't there. So I'm going to remake it over the next weekend and keep it regularly updated so any help with finding links to software, plugins, hardware, websites, learning materials and anything else you think might be relevant, any help would be greatly appreciated.
- Awesome Design Tools repository: The best design & development tools and plugins for everything (Illustrations, Co code tools, Mockup tools, UI design tools, Design inspiration, Animation tools, etc.)
- I made a fairly late comment on the "what designer resource post do you find most useful" yesterday and feel some may have missed out. I fully believe this GitHub link to be he holy grail.
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How to make nice looking designs when you are bad? Where can you find inspirations for layouts, colors, etc?
In addition to all these wonderful submissions, you might also want to check out : this repo and this one .
- Awesome Design Tools: BIG collection of the best design tools and plugins for everything
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how long did it take you to build your first site?
Also have a look at the awesome design tools, you should be able to find any colour, image, icon tools you need there.
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Is there a go-to website for background illustrations? (login pages etc)
Have a look at the Awesome-Design-Tools repo, look under illustrations.
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Good source for royalty free sound effects that I can use in my programs?
Check out https://github.com/goabstract/Awesome-Design-Tools#sound-design
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๐งข Stefan's Web Weekly #11
goabstract/Awesome-Design-Tools โ The best design tools and plugins for everything.
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๐10 Trending projects on GitHub for web developers - 19th March 2021
View on GitHub
infer
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An Introduction to Temporal Logic (With Applications to Concurrency Problems)
I think most development occurs on problems that can't be formally modeled anyway. Most developers work on things like, "can you add this feature to the e-commerce site? And can the pop-up be blue?" which isn't really model-able.
But that's not to say that formal methods are useless! We can still prove some interesting aspects of programs -- for example, that every lock that gets acquired later gets released. I think tools like Infer[0] could become common in the coming years.
[0]: https://fbinfer.com/
- Should I Rust or should I Go
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Enforcing Memory Safety?
Using infer, someone else exploited null-dereference checks to introduce simple affine types in C++. Cppcheck also checks for null-dereferences. Unfortunately, that approach means that borrow-counting references have a larger sizeof than non-borrow counting references, so optimizing the count away potentially changes the semantics of a program which introduces a whole new way of writing subtly wrong code.
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Interesting ocaml mention in buck2 by fb
Meta/Facebook are long time OCaml users, their logo is on the OCaml website. Their static analysis tool and its predecessor are both written in OCaml.
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CISA Director Easterly's comments about cyber security. Agree or disagree?
Then this idea that the US government will tell tech companies how to write secure software. Let's get this straight, the private sector, especially big tech is miles ahead of US government in this regard. Microsoft literally invented threat modelling and modern exploit mitigations. Facebook has the best appsec processes pretty much in the whole world, including their own cutting edge code analyzer. AWS uses formal verification everywhere. Meanwhile the US government itself runs mission-critical systems that's almost literally held together by bubble gum and toothpicks. Maybe they could dial down the arrogance a tad, get their own shit together, learn how this cyber stuff is actually done and only then try lecturing everyone else.
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A plan for cybersecurity and grid safety
Efforts: Dependabot, CodeQL, Coverity, facebook's Infer tool, etc
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A quick look at free C++ static analysis tools
I notice there isn't fbinfer. It's pretty cool, and is used for this library.
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silly guy
"Move fast, break stuff" is a great approach when you aren't pushing the broken bits to production. Fuck, even Facebook, the big "move fast, break stuff" company, uses tools to detect errors in its continuous integration toolchain. https://fbinfer.com/
- OCaml 5.0 Multicore is out
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Beyond Functional Programming: The Verse Programming Language (Epic Games' new language with Simon Peyton Jones)
TBH, there's a non-zero amount of non-"ivory tower" tools you may have used that are written in functional languages. Say, Pandoc or Shellcheck are written in Haskell; Infer and Flow are written in OCaml. RabbitMQ and Whatsapp are implemented in Erlang (FB Messenger was too, originally; they switched to the C++ servers later). Twitter backend is (or was, at least) written in Scala.
What are some alternatives?
Storyboard -> SwiftUI Converter
SonarQube - Continuous Inspection
ThisCouldBeUsButYouPlaying - :black_joker: Generate Swift Playgrounds for any library.
Spotbugs - SpotBugs is FindBugs' successor. A tool for static analysis to look for bugs in Java code.
R.swift - Strong typed, autocompleted resources like images, fonts and segues in Swift projects
Error Prone - Catch common Java mistakes as compile-time errors
SourceKitten - An adorable little framework and command line tool for interacting with SourceKit.
FindBugs - The new home of the FindBugs project
DBDebugToolkit - Set of easy to use debugging tools for iOS developers & QA engineers.
PMD - An extensible multilanguage static code analyzer.
XcodeGen - A Swift command line tool for generating your Xcode project
Checkstyle - Checkstyle is a development tool to help programmers write Java code that adheres to a coding standard. By default it supports the Google Java Style Guide and Sun Code Conventions, but is highly configurable. It can be invoked with an ANT task and a command line program.