LGV_TZ_Lookup
LGV_MeetingServer
LGV_TZ_Lookup | LGV_MeetingServer | |
---|---|---|
3 | 2 | |
2 | 1 | |
- | - | |
7.4 | 6.5 | |
8 months ago | 25 days ago | |
PHP | PHP | |
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.
LGV_TZ_Lookup
-
Falsehoods programmers believe about time zones
They don't really bother me. They aren't AI spam, and some folks may enjoy them. It's pretty easy to not click on a link, for me.
TZ are a fun project. I found that it's difficult to translate a long/lat into a TZ ID, so I wrote this[0].
Works a charm. It's based on the Timezone Boundary Builder[1].
[0] https://github.com/LittleGreenViper/LGV_TZ_Lookup
[1] https://github.com/evansiroky/timezone-boundary-builder
-
How to Write a Great Readme
I generally have a “What Problem Does This Solve?” section in my READMEs.
https://github.com/LittleGreenViper/LGV_TZ_Lookup#what-probl...
https://github.com/LittleGreenViper/LGV_MeetingServer#what-p...
https://github.com/RiftValleySoftware/RVS_Spinner#what-probl...
https://github.com/RiftValleySoftware/RVS_BlueThoth#what-pro...
https://github.com/RiftValleySoftware/RVS_PersistentPrefs#wh...
etc.
-
The Asymmetry of Open Source
Just because I'm a completionist, here's what I scared up[0].
I decided to make it a server, instead of a device library, because I can just run it once on the source data, that way, and I don't need to keep running it.
In any case, it's PHP and LAMP, so no one on this forum will like it, which suits me just fine. Figured I'd post it, anyway, for Ss and Gs.
[0] https://github.com/LittleGreenViper/LGV_TZ_Lookup
LGV_MeetingServer
-
XML is better than YAML
I find “self-documentation” often doesn’t actually work. It’s great in theory, but often falls down, in practice.
I often need to preface my config stuff with fairly substantial comment blocks that discuss the reasoning behind the configuration.
Here’s an example: https://github.com/LittleGreenViper/LGV_MeetingServer/blob/m...
-
How to Write a Great Readme
I generally have a “What Problem Does This Solve?” section in my READMEs.
https://github.com/LittleGreenViper/LGV_TZ_Lookup#what-probl...
https://github.com/LittleGreenViper/LGV_MeetingServer#what-p...
https://github.com/RiftValleySoftware/RVS_Spinner#what-probl...
https://github.com/RiftValleySoftware/RVS_BlueThoth#what-pro...
https://github.com/RiftValleySoftware/RVS_PersistentPrefs#wh...
etc.
What are some alternatives?
RVS_PersistentPrefs - A Simple Class For Basic Persistent Storage
keep - The open-source alert management and AIOps platform
revenut-web - SaaS metrics in a nutshell
yaml-sucks - YAML sucks.
undb - 🚀 Private first, unified, self-hosted no code database.
player - UI components and hooks for building video/audio players on the web. Robust, customizable, and accessible. Modern alternative to JW Player and Video.js.
uplaybook - A python-centric IT automation system.
mermaid - Generation of diagrams like flowcharts or sequence diagrams from text in a similar manner as markdown
nix-configs - My Nix{OS} configuration files
appsmith - Platform to build admin panels, internal tools, and dashboards. Integrates with 25+ databases and any API.