Boop
exhibitor
Boop | exhibitor | |
---|---|---|
16 | 6 | |
3,631 | 8 | |
- | - | |
1.4 | 6.8 | |
3 months ago | 12 months ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
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.
Boop
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DevToys–A Swiss army knife for developers
There's also Boop, which is open source: https://github.com/IvanMathy/Boop
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Ask HN: Most interesting tech you built for just yourself?
I've been using Boop, it's pretty good for, json, yaml, datetimes, hashing etc! Missing a lot of what you've mentioned, but might be able to get some more ideas from it!
https://github.com/IvanMathy/Boop
- Tutorial Mac OS
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My list of Setapp apps alternatives
Another alternative to DevUtils would be Boop. Or CyberChef, for that matter (web, but available for local and selfhosted installation).
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Recommendation for Software Engineer/Developer and Software architect apps?
in addition to what's already mentioned, https://github.com/IvanMathy/Boop to convert and format things instead of googling for a converter every time
- Boop, a Scriptable Scratchpad for Developers
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DevToys For mac
Also, Boop.
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What are some good open-source Mac apps you can't live without?
Boop: Collection of utilities/extensions for developers
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Made an app for Windows that aims to be a Swiss Army knife for developers. Sharing some screenshots here.
Though may I suggest checking out Boop? I love how minimal it looks. Maybe you can implement a minimal mode later?
exhibitor
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Ask HN: Most interesting tech you built for just yourself?
TL;DR: A React front-end component workshop, a simple version of Storybook.
So around 5 months ago, I needed a tool to preview front-end (React) components whilst I create them for a personal project of mine. There were two options: Storybook or Ladle.
Storybook is the tool everybody knows. I've used it before quite a lot. It's very big, full-fat, supports loads of use-cases, etc.
Ladle comes out of Uber. It's very small, lean, and doesn't support that much. After trying it out for a while, it just gives me a feeling like it's a 20% project to learn some new tech.
So I realised that I wanted something kind of in the middle. Something that's a bit more customizable than Ladle, but something much simpler and less intrusive than Storybook.
This led me to create Exhibitor (https://github.com/samhuk/exhibitor) (https://demo.exhibitor.dev).
I worked on it on-and-off for a couple months, and it ended up being something that I'm quite proud of. It's not perfect, and supports only a fraction of what Storybook does, however for a tool made by 1 engineer vs the 20+ for Storybook, I'm quite happy about it!
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Show HN: Exhibitor – Snappy and delightful React component workshop
Exhibitor, a snappy & delightful React component workshop, is GA. My aim is for Exhibitor to be an extremely fast, easy to use, and delightful tool for creating front-end component libraries.
It's been around 2 months since my last mention and quite a tonne has changed.
Wiki: https://github.com/samhuk/exhibitor/wiki
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Show HN: DriftDB is an open source WebSocket back end for real-time apps
Looks interesting. Coincidentally, I've just completed the bulk of work on a distributed Websocket network system to synchronize certain bits of state between multiple clients for my own kind of Storybook tool [0]. How interesting!
This kind of tool is exactly what I would have needed, instead of the approach I've taken which is a bit kludgy, grass-roots, novice-like, etc.
Good work :)
[0] https://github.com/samhuk/exhibitor/pull/22
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Ask HN: What have you created that deserves a second chance on HN?
I was a bit deflated when my submission about https://github.com/samhuk/exhibitor fell through the HN floor-boards.
Think Storybook but simpler, faster, better Typescript support, and uses esbuild by default.
...Is the aim. I'm the sole lead dev working on it at the moment up against the ~10-20 strong team who built most of Storybook, so it's a long road ahead, but it's growing into something I'm quite proud of and happy about.
- Show HN: Exhibitor – Snappy, no-fuss, delightful React component workshop
What are some alternatives?
DevUtils-app - All-in-one Toolbox for Developers. Native macOS app.
epub2tts - Turn an epub or text file into an audiobook
alfred-calculate-anything - Alfred Workflow to calculate anything with natural language
MLVPN - Multi-link VPN (ADSL/SDSL/xDSL/Network aggregation / bonding)
CotEditor - Lightweight Plain-Text Editor for macOS
scheme-for-max - Max/MSP external for scripting and live coding Max with s7 Scheme Lisp
DevToys - A Swiss Army knife for developers.
mqtt-to-kafka-bridge - Move your messages from MQTT to Apache Kafka in real-time :rocket:
macmediakeyforwarder - Media Key Forwarder for iTunes and Spotify
brethap
MacGesture - Global mouse gestures for macOS
ratarmount - Access large archives as a filesystem efficiently, e.g., TAR, RAR, ZIP, GZ, BZ2, XZ, ZSTD archives