Dash-iOS
caniuse
Dash-iOS | caniuse | |
---|---|---|
7 | 390 | |
7,136 | 5,503 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.5 | |
about 3 years ago | 5 days ago | |
Objective-C | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 |
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.
Dash-iOS
- Dash for macOS – API Documentation Browser, Snippet Manager
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DevDocs
Not a complete answer, but I hope Markdown is or becomes the standard for offline docs and text for local/offline consumption. I only ever write in markdown anyway (usually with http://obsidian.md).
The closest thing I know of for a service like RSS to download documents is [Dash for macOS - API Documentation Browser, Snippet Manager - Kapeli](https://kapeli.com/dash).
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At Least Skim The Manual
There are so many great sources of information out there and tools to improve the developer experience of documentation. Dash can make some of these online resources local for instant search and access on-the-go, if you prefer.
- Developer account removed by Apple – $108,878 frozen
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How can I download the rust docs to my phone?
For iOS, there used to be dash, but I'm learning now that was discontinued.
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Apple is threatening to remove Farmhouse unless they give 30%
If developer accounts count, then you can run unsigned / self signed code on iOS as well. That's how Dash for iOS was distributed for some time when it was banned from the App store: https://github.com/Kapeli/Dash-iOS
caniuse
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Time-Based CSS Animations
The article uses custom css @properties which are awesome and have 88% browser support [1].
One thing to watch out for is differences in how browsers handle setting the fallback initial-value. Chrome will use initial-value if CSS variable is undefined OR set to an invalid value. Firefox will only use initial-value if the variable is undefined. For most projects, this won't be an issue, but for a recent project, I ended up needing to use javascript to set default values in Firefox to iron out the inconsistency between browser implementations.
[1] https://caniuse.com/?search=%40property
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CSS Text Box Trim
Safari is the only browser that doesn't support extending HTML element
https://caniuse.com/?search=Custom%20Elements
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JavaScript is not single-threaded
You forgot to mention (Web)Workers. This is explicit creation, management, and communication with additional threads within JavaScript. What's more, they've been around in JavaScript longer than the V8 engine has even existed!
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Web_Workers...
https://caniuse.com/?search=webworkers
- Show HN: Render audio to HTML canvas using WebGPU
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Tree-shaking, the horticulturally misguided algorithm
Do you happen to know where can I check out the cutoff version for each browser? https://caniuse.com/?search=wasm doesn't have it (or other things like WasmGC for that matter)
- Le saviez-vous ? :focus :focus-within :focus-visible
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10 Websites Every Web Developer Should Bookmark
(https://caniuse.com/) A handy tool for checking the browser compatibility of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript features. Can I Use provides up-to-date support tables for various web technologies across different browsers.
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SASS is dead? CSS vs SASS 2024
Caniuse
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Free Resources Every Web Developer Should Know About
Can I Use (https://caniuse.com/)
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Speedometer 3.0: A Shared Browser Benchmark for Web Application Responsiveness
> Is it though?
In my experience it's the buggiest browser out of the big three, and is often missing basic features like e.g.:
https://caniuse.com/?search=opus
Supported in Firefox for *12 years* now, in Chrome for 10, still no support in Safari.
They only "support" Opus audio in their special snowflake '.caf' container, which is super buggy and the last time I checked no open source program could even generate Opus '.caf' files that could be played by Safari on all Apple platforms. I ended up writing a custom converter which takes a standard '.opus' file and remuxes it on-the-fly (I only store '.opus' files on my server) into Safari-compatible '.caf' files, taking special care to massage it so that it avoids all of their demuxer/decoder bugs. You shouldn't have to do this to have cross-browser high quality audio!
What are some alternatives?
zeal - Offline documentation browser inspired by Dash
browserslist - 🦔 Share target browsers between different front-end tools, like Autoprefixer, Stylelint and babel-preset-env
DockAltTab - Window preview app for MacOS (on the dock) using AltTab.
caniemail - Can I email… Support tables for HTML and CSS in emails.
devdocs - API Documentation Browser
postcss-preset-env - Convert modern CSS into something browsers understand
BetterMultitasking - iPadOS tweak to run iPhone apps natively on iPad.
modern-css-reset - A bare-bones CSS reset for modern web development.
ChatSecure-iOS - ChatSecure is a free and open source encrypted chat client for iOS that supports OTR and OMEMO encryption over XMPP.
modern-normalize - 🐒 Normalize browsers' default style
nvim-devdocs - Neovim DevDocs integration
Servo - Servo, the embeddable, independent, memory-safe, modular, parallel web rendering engine