chartjs-plugin-streaming
node
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chartjs-plugin-streaming | node | |
---|---|---|
1 | 917 | |
469 | 103,479 | |
- | 1.5% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
9 months ago | 7 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | 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.
chartjs-plugin-streaming
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showdev: Serverless IoT Dashboard
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node
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The Object model in EmberJS.
To install and run Ember.js, you'll need to follow these steps: Install Node.js and npm (Node Package Manager) on your computer. You can download the latest version of Node.js from the official website. Once Node.js and npm are installed, open a terminal window and run the following command to install the Ember.js command line interface (CLI):
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URL shortening using CLI
NodeJS - Link
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Next.js vs Node.js: A Modern Contrast
To get involved in the Node.js developer community, you can join community discussions or begin with learning if you’re new. The community discussion houses a GitHub list of issues related to Node.js' core features. If you want to chat in real time about Node.js development, there are Slack groups, and you can still connect with IRC clients or web clients when using the browser. Node.js has a calendar for public meetings.
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Build a Discord Bot with Discord.js V14: A Step-by-Step Guide
Download the latest version from the Node.js website, open the package installer, and follow the instructions Use a package manager like Homebrew with the command brew install node On Linux, you can consult this page to determine how you should install Node.
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Node.js 20.6 adds built-in support for .env files
As with all experimental things, a few things are missing. Some of these might lead to people using dotenv until support for these gets added. I will mention them here and let you see if they are dealbreakers. You can also follow the GitHub issue to track missing feature support.
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Netlify integrations can now inject serverless functions to enhance any site. Here’s how
Node
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Run a Linux Distro in your Android device
Depending on the stack of the repository you are cloning, you might have to install additional dependencies. For this demo, I'm using my own website, which is a static website built with Astro.js. It which requires to have Node.js installed and Yarn for package manager.
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Build a serverless ChatGPT with RAG using LangChain.js
A working Node.js v20+ environment
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Locally test and validate your Renovate configuration files
We will be using the self-hosted version of Renovate distributed via npm, but you can adapt the scripts in this article to use the Docker version, or others. Make sure you have Node.js installed on your machine.
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Building a README Crawler With Node.js
To execute the algorithm, we will use Node.js (for the JavaScript runtime) and node-fetch (for network requests). This means we will run the code locally from the command line. For this project, we will have an output folder to store all the README data, as well as a list (queue) of repository URLs to visit. Before diving into the code, it is important to plan the input and output of the algorithm. For this web crawler, we will start at a valid GitHub repository page, which would be one URL string. After visiting each page with a README, we will export the data into a new file. Now lets cover the process of requesting a repository page from a URL. For this, we only care about saving the README file that is displayed, and we will ignore any other links that GitHub displays (such as the navbar). We will send a URL request with node-fetch, and retrieve the result of a HTML string. If we convert the HTML string to a DOM Tree, we can search for a specific element. GitHub stores the README file under a div with the class "markdown-body". We can use a library called 'jsdom' to use Browser API methods, and return a specific node.
What are some alternatives?
MQTT.js - The MQTT client for Node.js and the browser
Svelte - Cybernetically enhanced web apps
awesome - A curated list of awesome Chart.js resources and libraries
widevine-l3-decryptor - A Chrome extension that demonstrates bypassing Widevine L3 DRM
react-live - A flexible playground for live editing React components
source-map-resolve - [DEPRECATED] Resolve the source map and/or sources for a generated file.
chartjs-plugin-stacked100 - This plugin for Chart.js that makes your bar chart to 100% stacked bar chart.
sharp-libvips - Packaging scripts to prebuild libvips and its dependencies - you're probably looking for https://github.com/lovell/sharp
sample-flask-charts-multiple - Flask Charts via amCharts, Apex, G.Charts - Free Sample | AppSeed
nodejs.dev - A redesign of Nodejs.org built using Gatsby.js with React.js, TypeScript, and Remark.
Tasmota - Alternative firmware for ESP8266 and ESP32 based devices with easy configuration using webUI, OTA updates, automation using timers or rules, expandability and entirely local control over MQTT, HTTP, Serial or KNX. Full documentation at
hashlips_art_engine - HashLips Art Engine is a tool used to create multiple different instances of artworks based on provided layers.