csslint | npm | |
---|---|---|
16 | 48 | |
4,755 | 17,233 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 2.1 | |
almost 4 years ago | almost 4 years ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Artistic License 2.0 |
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.
csslint
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Front-end Guide
CSS Lint
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allowing users to edit stylesheet
With that being said, you could run some css linter I believe if you really decided to let them to do. Maybe leverage something like this: https://github.com/CSSLint/csslint
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Any good plugin or tool that checks your UI to see if a UX element is badly styled?
http://csslint.net/ ?
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Firefox Beta 103.4 macOS Vibrancy Broken Again?
Thanks in advance folks, if anyone would like to see any info or pics or whatever, I can post. If I haven't gone mad or blind from going thru too many lines of code. (it's hard to use things like CSSLint because of all the !importants you have to use to supercede stuff, and csslint.net flags every --variable-name as an error, so even after switching off everything but basic checking it doesnt work too well, not catching simple syntax errors even... maybe I should look into something better there)
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I just spent 5 hours staring at a 20 line file wondering why it wasn’t working.
VSCode can do real-time linting for you, or you can run it through an online linter.
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Colored lines on tabs.
Sorry, meant http://csslint.net - edited to change.
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Some elements in my stylesheet stopped working randomly
Second, check to make sure you didn't make a change to your CSS which broke all of the CSS after that point. You could use a site like CSS Lint to help check that for you (just copy-and-paste all of your CSS there and click "Lint").
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Is this CSS guide outdated? If yes, please help me find an up to date guide.
You can use a linting site, such as http://csslint.net/, to check for syntax & redundancy errors before you save them to your sub's stylesheet.
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Tips for writing cleaner CSS?
Also you could look into linting your css (http://csslint.net/) This will force consistency in the way you write and catch mistakes
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I'm trying to add indentation in css but it won't work and idk what I'm doing wrong
You might want to run your CSS code through a CSS error checker, like CSS Lint, to help you find errors like that. (Note: It's very picky, so you may get lots of warnings that you may be able to ignore, but you should definitely fix any errors.)
npm
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XML is better than YAML
The fact that JSON doesn't support comments is so annoying, and I always thought that Douglas Crockford's rationale for this basically made no sense ("They can be misused!" - like, so what, nearly anything can be misused. So without support for comments e.g. in package.json files I have to do even worse hacky workaround bullshit like "__some_field_comment": "this is my comment"). There is of course jsonc and JSON5 but the fact that it's not supported everywhere means 10 years later we still can't write comments in package.json (there is https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/4482 and about a million related issues).
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Jest not recommended to be used in Node.js due to instanceOf operator issues
Things like the sparkline charts on npmjs (e.g. https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm ) are interactive SVGs. I think they're pretty common for data visualizations of all kinds
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JavaScript registry NPM vulnerable to 'manifest confusion' abuse
I actually did a POC 7 years ago about this - https://github.com/tanepiper/steal-ur-stuff
It was reported to npm at the time, but they chose to ignore it - https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/17724
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I'm a Teapot
Every time this pops up, I'm reminded of the day that the NPM registry started returning 418 responses.
I remember being at a training course that day and my manager asking me what we could do to fix it because our CI was failing to pull dependencies from NPM.
Trying to explain that NPM was returning a status code intended as an April Fools joke and which was never meant to see the light of production was quite difficult
https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/20791
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Dissecting Npm Malware: Five Packages And Their Evil Install Scripts
I should really get around to how I discovered this 6 years ago and still nothing done about it
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Attackers are hiding malware in minified packages distributed to NPM
Whenever something like this comes up I usually have to tap the sign (and the original report)
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NPM Vs PNPM
NPM is not "Node Package Manager". https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm
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A not so unfortunate sharp edge in Pipenv
> which can be overriden with env setting
Support for this is not great. Lots of packages still don't support this properly. My experience matches the 2015 comment https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/775#issuecomment-71294085
> Not sure why "symlinks" would be involved.
If you make your node_modules a symlink, multiple packages will fail. Even if you're not interested in doing that, others are.
> What NPM does is leaps and bounds ahead
Unless you change your node / gyp version. It doesn't really have a concept of runtime version. You can restrict it, but not have two concurrent versions if they conflict.
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Front-end Guide
[email protected] was released in May 2017 and it seems to address many of the issues that Yarn aims to solve. Do keep an eye on it!
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Framework axios pushed a broken update, crippling thousands of websites
I think it's had been supposed to do that since forever. Apart from some bug in npm 5.3. Are you sure your package-lock versions actually conform to the semver ranges in your package.json?
What are some alternatives?
Sentry - Developer-first error tracking and performance monitoring
pnpm - Fast, disk space efficient package manager
terraform - Terraform enables you to safely and predictably create, change, and improve infrastructure. It is a source-available tool that codifies APIs into declarative configuration files that can be shared amongst team members, treated as code, edited, reviewed, and versioned.
corepack - Zero-runtime-dependency package acting as bridge between Node projects and their package managers
webpack - A bundler for javascript and friends. Packs many modules into a few bundled assets. Code Splitting allows for loading parts of the application on demand. Through "loaders", modules can be CommonJs, AMD, ES6 modules, CSS, Images, JSON, Coffeescript, LESS, ... and your custom stuff.
spm
Cycle.js - A functional and reactive JavaScript framework for predictable code
yarn - The 1.x line is frozen - features and bugfixes now happen on https://github.com/yarnpkg/berry
styled-components - Visual primitives for the component age. Use the best bits of ES6 and CSS to style your apps without stress 💅
Bower - A package manager for the web
redux - A JS library for predictable global state management
jspm