pagecrypt
grunt
pagecrypt | grunt | |
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3 | 17 | |
208 | 12,259 | |
- | 0.1% | |
5.7 | 3.7 | |
3 months ago | 5 months ago | |
HTML | JavaScript | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
pagecrypt
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Is zero-knowledge hosting a thing?
Thanks, that's close to what I want! This projects leads to another one which is a bit simpler and closer to what I envisioned. The last project can be enhanced to simplify access - switch from explicit password to password stored in a link itself.
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Password Protect Static Sites with PageCrypt
PageCrypt is a novel solution to password protecting HTML without a backend. It’s a library you can use as part of your site’s build step or as a command line tool. It uses the Web Crypto API -- currently supported by all major browsers -- and a password to encrypt an HTML page, which you can then host on any static hosting platform, including Render! An HTML page encrypted with PageCrypt prompts the viewer for a password. Upon entering the correct password, the page is decrypted and its content replaces the password prompt.
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[AskJS] Thoughts on using the WebCrypto API to protect a static site?
I was researching how to put a password in front of a static site, and someone told me about StatiCrypt. Digging into that a bit more, I found PageCrypt, which uses the standardized WebCrypto API to encrypt an HTML page and put a simple password form in front of it. It also has more recent GitHub activity than the StatiCrypt repo. Here's a PageCrypt example: https://pagecrypt.onrender.com (password is s3cr3t). Before entering the password, right-click and check out how PageCrypt stores the encrypted payload in a hidden
grunt
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How to improve page load speed and response times: A comprehensive guide
Many web pages use CSS and JavaScript files to handle various features and styles. Each file, however, requires a separate HTTP request, which can slow down page loading. Concatenation comes into play here. It involves combining multiple CSS or JavaScript files into a single file. As a result, pages load faster, reducing the time spent requesting individual files. Gulp, Grunt, and Webpack are some of the tools that can assist you in speeding up the concatenation process. They enable seamless merging of many files during development, ensuring deployment readiness.
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Build a Vite 5 backend integration with Flask
Once you build a simple Vite backend integration, try not to complicate Vite's configuration unless you absolutely must. Vite has become one of the most popular bundlers in the frontend space, but it wasn't the first and it certainly won't be the last. In my 7 years of building for the web, I've used Grunt, Gulp, Webpack, esbuild, and Parcel. Snowpack and Rome came-and-went before I ever had a chance to try them. Bun is vying for the spot of The New Hotness in bundling, Rome has been forked into Biome, and Vercel is building a Rust-based Webpack alternative.
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Understanding package.json II: Scripts
Keep scripts independent: Keep your scripts independent of each other to avoid dependency issues. If you need to run one script after another, use a task runner like Gulp or Grunt to define tasks and their dependencies.
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JavaScript Module Bundlers and all that Jazz ✨
Browserify was great at bundling scripts, but what if we need to transform code - Say compile CoffeeScript to JavaScript, for this, a new group of tools for the web was born, which focussed on running code transforms. These are usually called task runners, and the most popular ones are Grunt and Gulp.
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The Emperor's New Library
What we see, a decade ago, are that many of the "popular" libraries, frameworks, and methods, not surprisingly, have gone by the wayside, a lot that have remained in current code as difficult-to-removemodernize legacy cruft (Bower, Gulp, Grunt, Backbone, Angular 1, ...), and then we have the small minority that are still here. Some that remain have had their utility lessened/questioned by platform and language improvements (jQuery, lodash, ...), but very, very few exist that are the same now as they were then. Another fun historical reference: issue #118 of "JavaScript Weekly" (February 22, 2013) includes a first link out to asm.js.
- Which tool for bundling ts and sass in a plain old php website
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Who still uses Grunt.js?
Grunt.js is a favorite tool of mine, while it's most commonly viewed as a (legacy) build system, I've found it to be a fairly robust CLI framework for designing local and automated tasks and still actively develop tasks to this day.
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userscript-modules-template
User script template that acts as module and tries to simulate imports. I built this to help me develop my user scripts, after learning about Grunt, and I thought I should share.
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Supercharge your CSS with Tailwind
With the pre-processors, you can shrink your CSS and increase reuse through variables. In almost all working cases, it will be an improvement above vanilla CSS. There are also implementations now, via PostCSS, that add vendor prefixes for you. The major drawback is, of course, that you have to compile your CSS beforehand; usually done via part of your tooling such as Grunt or Gulp.
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How to replace webpack & babel with Vite on a legacy React Typescript project
As far as build tools go I remember how popular Grunt was when it was first released, then it was Gulp, and Babel came along to help you add new us features and get them working on older browsers.
What are some alternatives?
staticrypt - Password protect a static HTML page, decrypted in-browser in JS with no dependency. No server logic needed.
gulp - A toolkit to automate & enhance your workflow
webpack - A bundler for javascript and friends. Packs many modules into a few bundled assets. Code Splitting allows for loading parts of the application on demand. Through "loaders", modules can be CommonJs, AMD, ES6 modules, CSS, Images, JSON, Coffeescript, LESS, ... and your custom stuff.
parcel - The zero configuration build tool for the web. 📦🚀
Rollup - Next-generation ES module bundler
PageCrypt - Client-side password-protection for HTML
auth0-java - Java client library for the Auth0 platform
Broccoli - Browser compilation library – an asset pipeline for applications that run in the browser
PrivateBin - A minimalist, open source online pastebin where the server has zero knowledge of pasted data. Data is encrypted/decrypted in the browser using 256 bits AES.
webpack-dashboard - A CLI dashboard for webpack dev server