RecipeFilter
curriculum
RecipeFilter | curriculum | |
---|---|---|
10 | 1,835 | |
292 | 8,807 | |
- | 1.7% | |
3.4 | 10.0 | |
4 months ago | 3 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
RecipeFilter
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25 awesome food websites -
https://github.com/sean-public/RecipeFilter Chrome extension that focuses recipes front and center on food blogs - GitHub - sean-public/RecipeFilter: Chrome extension that focuses recipes front and center on food blogs
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Pictures do not do them justice, these are hands down the best honey rolls of all time. Putting link to the recipe in the comments
This is an open source project: https://github.com/sean-public/RecipeFilter
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I made a Chrome Extension that gets rid of clutter in recipe sites and shows just the recipe and instructions
Recipefilter
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What is a website everyone should know about?
There's also an extension for both Chrome and Firefox called Recipe Filter, which gives you a popup with just the recipe on those blog sites. Works pretty well.
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Show HN: OnlyRecipe.app β Remove clutter from recipe sites. No story, no popups
I get loads of really kind emails and messages on a daily basis from the users. It's been really rewarding in that way. A couple ideas that people have put forth seem really reasonable, such as unit conversions, print-friendly pages, and automatic nutrition labels. In fact, I'd actually love those too as a cook!
One feature that would improve the recipe recognition and unlock lots of other features where it's found would be JSON-LD support. I'm seeing lots of recipe pages containing those handy, structured formats lately.
A comment about JSON-LD: https://github.com/sean-public/RecipeFilter/issues/22#issuec...
But all of these things stray from the fundamental simplicity of what it does. The code is just 92 lines of JS and works (or breaks!) transparently. If I started adding features, it would quickly become another complex system to maintain and I have plent of that at work ;)
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Ask HN: What browser extensions are a must-have for HNers in 2021?
Lots of good extensions in this thread.
Here are some optional extensions I like:
- Twemex - https://twemex.app/ - Adds a really useful sidebar to Twitter.
- Recipe Filter - https://github.com/sean-public/RecipeFilter - Focuses recipes front and center on food blogs
- Notion Boost - https://gourav.io/notion-boost - Adds a lot of really nice features to Notion
- Tampermonkey - https://www.tampermonkey.net/ - Lets you create your own JS customizations on web pages without needing to make a whole browser extension.
I really wish it was far easier for everyday people to make their own personal browser extension-like functionality and share it with others. Extending the apps we use feels really empowering and can help people transition from helpless consumers of apps to authors of how their computer works. Here's an essay I like detailing this view:
https://www.geoffreylitt.com/2019/07/29/browser-extensions.h...
And while I'm here I'd also like to plug a service I wrote that lets you easily add paid features to extensions you develop:
https://extensionpay.com
I made it to use myself but lots of developers have found it useful in monetizing their extensions without ads or selling user data. And even to my surprise, users are actually willing to pay for browser extensions! The service has made devs over $13k since I launched earlier this year!
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Thank you food bloggers who include "jump to recipe"! ππππππ
I use Recipe Filter [chrome extension or if you prefer the github]
- Recipeasly: Food website removed after blogger backlash
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I no longer trust The Great Suspender
This is an open source project: https://github.com/sean-public/RecipeFilter
curriculum
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Confidently Incorrect - Navigating Battleships
There were frustrations and compromises and victories, but little by little I can see my progress, and I still enjoy the act of overcoming these new challenges and learning more and more. Each day is another little lesson. I look forward to continuing with The Odin Project and the next challenges, but in the meantime I must return to looking for my alternance (apprenticeship) and maybe a small personal project before launching into the next part of the curriculum.
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Seeking Guidance on the Path to Web Development: My Journey So Far and Next Steps
The Odin Project: With its hands-on approach, The Odin Project guids through everything from basic HTML and CSS to full-stack development.
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Free Resources Every Web Developer Should Know About
The Odin Project (https://www.theodinproject.com/)
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π₯ Top 10 Best Websites to Learn Coding for Free! π»
The Odin Project The Odin Project offers a full-stack curriculum for aspiring web developers. With its project-based approach, you'll gain practical experience while learning HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and more.
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100+ FREE Resources Every Web Developer Must Try
TheOdinProject
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A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev
The Odin Project - Free, open-source platform with a curriculum focused on JavaScript and Ruby for web development.
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Ask HN: Would doing a coding bootcamp be a horrible idea?
I'll throw in a vote for teaching yourself or using free resources and communities. Even if you go down the bootcamp route it is going to take a lot of self motivation and work outside of the bootcamp / afterwards in order to become job ready. Or at least do this to start with to make sure you like it.
I did this myself a few years years ago over lockdown. I had a lot of down time and worked on teaching myself web development full time 5 days a week for about a year. I was then able to land a job at a FAANG company through an apprenticeship scheme that they offer in the UK (I'm not sure if these kinds of schemes are available in the US) where I stayed for a year and a half and I am now working for a startup in a position I found through connections I made at my previous job. At the time I did have other offers for non-apprenticeship roles at other companies so don't let the absence of apprenticeships put you off if they aren't on offer in the US. The job market was definitely better when I was applying for my first job so the process might be more drawn out now. The main resource I used for self teaching was The Odin Project (https://www.theodinproject.com/). I also did a batch at The Recurse Center (https://www.recurse.com/) which was a great experience in general, especially for getting some hands on time working on projects with other people. I would say be curious, reach out to people who are working on things you find interesting to ask them for a chat and just persevere with the applications as you will definitely get a lot of rejections.
One more thing (might be UK specific as well) but I would check to see if there are any government funded bootcamps you might be able to get a place on. I know multiple people in the UK who got the job center to pay for them to do a bootcamp while they were on universal credit and now work in the industry.
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Confidently Incorrect - Revisiting previous projects.
So I have been learning how to code and broadly development since 2020, during the Covid-19 lockdowns, beginning with the classic triple threat of HTML/CSS/JavaScript, adding into the mix a dash of Python and since returning to live in France 2022 have committed to The Odin Project web-development program and happily began my full time formal learning with Ada Tech School in 2023. Now the search for my 12-month-long apprenticeship (Alternance, en français) begins, as well as continuing my self-study and side-projects.
- The Odin Project β Full stack web development curriculum
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Programming Learning Journey So Far and Onward
TOP Link
What are some alternatives?
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developer-roadmap - Interactive roadmaps, guides and other educational content to help developers grow in their careers.
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Rack - The virtual Eurorack studio
auto-tab-discard - Use native tab discarding method to automatically reduce memory usage of inactive tabs
computer-science - :mortar_board: Path to a free self-taught education in Computer Science!
Cookie-AutoDelete - Firefox and Chrome WebExtension that deletes cookies and other browsing site data as soon as the tab closes, domain changes, browser restarts, or a combination of those events.
CS50x-2021 - π HarvardX: CS50 Introduction to Computer Science (CS50x)
web-archives - Browser extension for viewing archived and cached versions of web pages, available for Chrome, Edge and Safari
LeetCode - This is my LeetCode solutions for all 2000+ problems, mainly written in C++ or Python.
vimium - The hacker's browser.
PSWriteHTML - PSWriteHTML is PowerShell Module to generate beautiful HTML reports, pages, emails without any knowledge of HTML, CSS or JavaScript. To get started basics PowerShell knowledge is required.