GraphvizOnline
jQuery-menu-aim
GraphvizOnline | jQuery-menu-aim | |
---|---|---|
28 | 10 | |
747 | 7,700 | |
- | - | |
3.2 | 0.0 | |
about 2 months ago | over 5 years ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
GraphvizOnline
-
Ask HN: Who's Seeking New Friends?
(paste it into https://dreampuf.github.io/GraphvizOnline to see a visual representation)
Where task 1 diverges, you can run task2 and task3 in parallel, because they don't depend on eachother's outputs. Then you need to join task4 and task5 to task6.
My email is in my profile, I'd love to chat about your thoughts on what futuristic software means to you. For me it means futuristic interactions with computers, alternative approaches to programming.
- What are the must-visit websites you use every day?
-
Terraform: Advanced Commands Overview
You can view this file with the Graphviz binary or an online tool like Graphviz Viewer.
-
Is there an AI that can generate logical diagrams or er diagrams like these?
You can copy and paste this DOT graph code into an online graph visualization tool like GraphvizOnline to see the visual representation of the code flow.
-
The "Show Me" plugin lets GPT-4 create diagrams and is pretty neat
You can ask gpt to output as (mermaid / graphvis digraph) format via a code block. Then view inside a valid viewer like https://mermaid.live or https://dreampuf.github.io/GraphvizOnline
-
The Factions of Doskvol, Visualized
Visualization was made by me using GraphVIZ, and rendered using dot. You can see the source here, and you can mess around with it by plugging the source into this handy website. You can remove factions you don't care about, or update to fit the fiction in your game..
- What workaround do you use to make ChatGPT draw diagrams?
-
Quest 9 : Looking Back
After moving through the new Graph, is_cyclic, and prune you get to the real meat and potatoes: shortest unweighted, shortest weighted, and max flow. In the following I want to discuss some representation/visualization (shoutout Graphviz).
-
Favorite Pipeline/Methods Figure
https://dreampuf.github.io/GraphvizOnline/ for making a basic figure.
-
Optimal minimal resource calculations for end-game 100% efficiency 1-Machine usage flow
Note: - Tools used Graphbiz and dot language: https://dreampuf.github.io/GraphvizOnline - Source: https://satisfactory.fandom.com - Recipes used are the best based on a resource-weighted analysis (Weighted Point is the weighted consumption rate which is calculated by: (resource consumption rate / maximum extraction rate) * 10,000. The lower the better. ) - Some numbers have been simplified i.e. 8.8888 to 9 to simplify other calculations. - Energy and its resource needs are not included
jQuery-menu-aim
-
Javascript: What Is The Best Approach To Creating MouseMove Animations Specific To Buttons?
The way to get around this is to do something like the Amazon Menu Hack
-
Unintended presses due to menu loading: Is there a name for this issue?
I move diagonally to an item in a submenu, and on the way there I accidentally open a different submenu and click an item in that instead. (This is ironically easy to do with the top-level menu on ixda.org, for example.) A rudimentary CSS-only fix for this is dead-spacing part of the route into a submenu. The usual JS fix, meanwhile, is to apply a delay to any hover-induced closing of a submenu, but that makes the rest of the parent menu laggy. The classier fix — pioneered by macOS, popularized by Amazon — is putting an imaginary rubber band around the submenu and its parent item, and applying a delay only in the part of the parent menu that would be inside the rubber band, letting the rest of the menu respond at the usual speed.
-
How's this trick in web is called? I believe if you understand what I mean, this image is self explanatory. I want to look at the code that implements it, really curious
And the plugin: https://github.com/kamens/jQuery-menu-aim
-
Get in Zoomer, We're Saving React
>So what exactly did we lose? It's quite simple: by moving software into the cloud and turning them into web-based SaaS offerings, many of the basic affordances that used to be standard have gotten watered down or removed entirely. Here are some examples:
>Menus let you cross over empty space and other menu items, instead of strictly enforcing hover rectangles.
I met the guy who implemented that feature, Frank Leahy, when I was working on a project with Current TV. He rewrote the Menu Manager for Mac SE and Mac II. We were reminiscing about how great the original Apple Human Interface guidelines were, and I mentioned how it actually documented that subtle feature, and he told me he was the one who implemented it, and that he was touched that somebody actually noticed and appreciated it as much as I did.
https://bjk5.com/post/44698559168/breaking-down-amazons-mega...
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17404401
DonHopkins on June 26, 2018 [–]
The comments are actually great -- even Tog weighs in! It also mentions Frank Lehey, who rewrote the Menu Manager for Mac SE and Mac II.
Jake Smith • 5 years ago This was first implemented by Apple's HID team back in the 80s, specifically Bruce Tognazzini, I believe.
Bruce "Tog" Tognazzini Jake Smith • 5 years ago Yes, I did invent it back in 1986 and it is firmly in the public domain. From what I remember, it was Jim Batson who worked out the math and coded it for the Mac OS. The OS X team later failed to copy the algorithm, so I am happy to see that amazon has resurrected it.
Josh Davenport Jake Smith • 5 years ago I think it was yes. It looks like it was originally implemented by NeXT and then removed by Apple when they bought NeXT. Tog himself talks about what happened here: https://www.asktog.com/columns/022DesignedToGiveFitts.html in the answer to question 6 - "When I specified the Mac hierarchical menu algorthm in the mid-'80s, I called for a buffer zone shaped like a <, so that users could make an increasingly-greater error as they neared the hierarchical without fear of jumping to an unwanted menu...........Sadly, the NeXT folks, when coming to Apple, copied Windows, rather than the Mac"
markr_7 • 5 years ago Can't comment on the HID team, Bruce, or possibly the many times it was even implemented at Apple, but as a young developer at Apple in the 80s, I remember stopping by Frank Leahy's office as he was tweaking his code to get menus to "work right." I've often recalled the experience because of the time he was spending to get it right, and how the behavior wasn't simple once you started really trying to meet a users expectations. If I remember right it wasn't just the direction, but also time and therefore velocity. For example, you wouldn't want to stick with the wrong menu if the user wasn't really moving with purpose in the direction of the sub-menu.
-
Best Sites to practice making a mock of ?
Hwre's an article that does a much better job than me at explaining.
- How to Draw S-Curved Arrows Between Boxes
-
Creating a Smart Mega Menu with Vue.js
Even though it seems like a minor thing, there have been many articles written on this exact issue! For instance, Ben Kamens published a blog post analyzing how Amazon avoided this problem by using trigonometry. An imaginary triangle is constructed with its vertices placed at the cursor’s location and the upper and lower boundaries of the border between main categories and sub-categories. The idea is to avoid selecting another main category as long as the cursor is within this triangle. Smashing Magazine also has a detailed post on this subject that’s worth reading.
- Why is switching between start menu sections is so Laggy
- how do i make taskbar have more leniency when moving over other icons?
- (+4000) Breaking down Amazon's mega dropdown
What are some alternatives?
Azure-PlantUML - PlantUML sprites, macros, and other includes for Azure services
Slide and swipe - :zap: A sliding swipe menu that works with touchSwipe library.
elk - Eclipse Layout Kernel - Automatic layout for Java applications.
Slideout - A touch slideout navigation menu for your mobile web apps.
flowchart-fun - Easily generate flowcharts and diagrams from text ⿻
mmenu - The best javascript plugin for app look-alike on- and off-canvas menus with sliding submenus for your website and webapp.
mermaid - Generation of diagrams like flowcharts or sequence diagrams from text in a similar manner as markdown
jQuery Superfish Dropdown Menu Plugin - Superfish is a jQuery plugin that adds usability enhancements to existing multi-level drop-down menus.
d3-graphviz - Graphviz DOT rendering and animated transitions using D3
jQuery contextMenu - jQuery contextMenu plugin & polyfill
excalidraw - Virtual whiteboard for sketching hand-drawn like diagrams
mega-menu - A smart mega menu made with Vue.js.