async
moment
async | moment | |
---|---|---|
18 | 102 | |
28,177 | 47,989 | |
- | 0.1% | |
8.2 | 6.0 | |
10 days ago | 3 months ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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async
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Cool NPM Packages for web Dev </>
Link:https://www.npmjs.com/package/async
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Handling Large Numbers of Promises in Node JS
3. async.eachLimit
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Avoid the Promise.all pitfall
Well you could just install the async package which has lots of useful functions like mapLimit which will reduce the burden and only run a number in parallel.
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What is this callback in async.parallel function?
Have you checked out the docs for the async library they are using?
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How to limit concurrency with Python asyncio?
Edit:2. What's a good library that takes care of common async patterns? (Something like async)
- I Avoid Async/Await
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What is the difference between async.waterfall and async.series
The nodejs async module: https://github.com/caolan/async provides 2 similar methods, async.waterfall and async.series.
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JavaScript ES6 promise for loop [duplicate]
With async I'd simply use async.series().
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Some questions about events and promises
I don't understand. Sure you could spawn a ton of processes, but things might be bogged down. There are utilities out there for doing work queues.... so only N workers are running at any one time. The async library has some utilities for that. https://github.com/caolan/async
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Caolan Asyncjs vs Async/Await: Which One to Use for Async Operations in NodeJS
The documentation of asyncjs is quite straightforward and easy to read. As we've only seen a couple of use cases in this article, I'd recommend to go the asyncjs documentation and check out other possibilities with the library. You can also try to replicate the same using async/await to solidify your understanding of where the library might still make sense.
moment
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Cool NPM Packages for web Dev </>
Link :https://www.npmjs.com/package/moment
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100+ Must-Have Web Development Resources
Moment.js: A JavaScript library for parsing, validating, manipulating, and displaying dates.
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Top 20 Javascript Libraries on Github
Repository: Moment.js
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You're parsing URLs wrong.
The fact that moment.js or day.js needs to exist in 2024 bothers me a lot.
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JavaScript Compare Dates: From Chaos to Clarity
Moment.js lets you do amazing things with dates and times in JavaScript. You can easily compare, change, and format them in different ways. For example, you can say things like "today is Monday" or "3 hours ago" or "12/31/2020". To start with Moment.js, you need to install it and import it into your JavaScript project. For example:
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How to Convert String to Date in JavaScript
To learn more about Moment.js, please visit their official website.
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8 NPM Packages for JavaScript Beginners [2024][+tutorials]
Ah, Moment.js, the guardian angel of date and time manipulation. Ever needed to format a date, calculate durations, or display something like "2 days ago"? Moment.js has got your back. It's a lifesaver for anything date and time-related, making it a must-have in your project, especially if you're into making your users feel like you really get them.
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Adding "Created At" and "Last Updated" Dates to Jekyll
After hours of trying to figure out why Jekyll was still showing "Today" for a post I modified last week, I remembered that I am using the timeago filter from jekyll-timeago plugin. I was rendering the dates using {{ doc.last_modified_at | timeago }}. As you know, Jekyll is a static site generator, and it renders this as HTML at the time of build, and only then. This means any date rendered with timeago is hardcoded as is in the HTML and won't change until the next build. I switched all the dates to the "%-d %b %y" format for now. Might use moment.js in the future to get the timeago dates back.
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The 20 most used React libraries
moment: Handles date and time manipulations with ease. Learn more
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👨🚀 Traversing Time with Intl.RelativeTimeFormat()
For the longest time working with dates in JavaScript was a huge pain. That’s why libraries such as moment.js or date-fns are so popular. A lot of times I’d reach for these libraries when working with relative time formatting, but since late last year we’ve had pretty great browser support for the RelativeTimeFormat() method. In my mind, relative dates are just more visually appealing, especially for working with dates internationally. Dates like "5 days ago" or "in 2 months" are far more intuitive for users than 12/12/2023, or 03/11/2027. Folks in the US will see that as March 11, 2027, whereas the rest of the world will see that as November 03, 2027. What a nightmare.
What are some alternatives?
Bluebird - :bird: :zap: Bluebird is a full featured promise library with unmatched performance.
dayjs - ⏰ Day.js 2kB immutable date-time library alternative to Moment.js with the same modern API
q - A promise library for JavaScript
date-fns - ⏳ Modern JavaScript date utility library ⌛️
contra - :surfer: Asynchronous flow control with a functional taste to it
Luxon - ⏱ A library for working with dates and times in JS
neo-async - Neo-Async is thought to be used as a drop-in replacement for Async, it almost fully covers its functionality and runs faster
dateformat - A node.js package for Steven Levithan's excellent dateFormat() function.
Simple-Series-Parallel - A minimalist utility module for running async functions in series or parallel
moment-timezone - Timezone support for moment.js
step - An async control-flow library that makes stepping through logic easy.
timeago.js - :clock8: :hourglass: timeago.js is a tiny(2.0 kb) library used to format date with `*** time ago` statement.