ByStar
ByStar | notes.eatonphil.com | |
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1 | 5 | |
1,050 | 39 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | over 1 year ago | |
Ruby | HTML | |
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.
ByStar
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Ask HN: Could you show your personal blog here?
https://ryanbigg.com
I usually write posts about code, but this post about culture and values really resonated with a lot of people:
https://ryanbigg.com/2021/12/culture-and-values
notes.eatonphil.com
- What happened to blogging for the hell of it?
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Ask HN: Could you show your personal blog here?
https://vikramoberoi.com/how-i-made-atariemailarchive-org/. I wrote this one when I open-sourced the dataset behind atariemailarchive.org. The dataset got featured in Data is Plural and in a podcast interview I did with Jeremy Singer-Vine.
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My favorite personal blog to read this past year is Phil Eaton's (eatonphil on HN): https://notes.eatonphil.com/.
I enjoy the subject matter he posts about (a lot of systems work and research, primarily), but his other posts are great too.
His post, "Is it worth writing about?" is a nice inspirational one for folks who want to/have been thinking about writing: https://notes.eatonphil.com/is-it-worth-writing-about.html.
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RIP Jekyll (The Genesis of the Jamstack)
Personally I don't find static site generators worth the effort. I end up just writing my own for each site in 1-200 lines of Python. It's normally just a markdown library and a template engine wrapped with a file system walker.
Here's an example: https://github.com/eatonphil/notes.eatonphil.com/blob/master.... It's longer than usual since it embeds parts of the home page html inside it.
These scripts last for years and only change slightly over time. Very low maintenance.
- Lessons from Building a Static Site Generator
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Good books/courses to learn networking essentials for web developers?
As luck would have it, my blog on Github pages is down. So here's the post describing the four in markdown.
Tldr; Designing Data Intensive Applications, Effective Python, The Google SRE book, and High Performance Browser Networking.
https://github.com/eatonphil/notes.eatonphil.com/blob/master...
What are some alternatives?
Chronic - Chronic is a pure Ruby natural language date parser.
heneli.dev - Heap State. It's a blog
ice_cube - Ruby Date Recurrence Library - Allows easy creation of recurrence rules and fast querying
blog-cells - Add interactive code snippets to any blog or webpage.
validates_timeliness - Date and time validation plugin for ActiveModel and Rails. Supports multiple ORMs and allows custom date/time formats.
Suomi-Tavu
TZinfo - TZInfo - Ruby Timezone Library
smallweb - Kagi Small Web
time_diff - Gem which calculates the difference between two times
pandoc-ssg - Pandoc-SSG is a Make driven Pandoc static site generator. It features basic functionality in a trivial implementation.
fugit - time tools (cron, parsing, durations, ...) for Ruby, rufus-scheduler, and flor
eleventy 🕚⚡️ - A simpler site generator. Transforms a directory of templates (of varying types) into HTML.