emacs-ng
coffeescript
Our great sponsors
emacs-ng | coffeescript | |
---|---|---|
78 | 54 | |
1,614 | 16,424 | |
1.1% | - | |
10.0 | 3.4 | |
7 days ago | 26 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | CoffeeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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emacs-ng
- Emacs-ng: A project to integrate Deno and WebRender into Emacs
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Ask HN: Design of Emacs type extensible editor based on electron?
This is exactly what emacs-ng does?
https://emacs-ng.github.io/emacs-ng/
> This project should be considered an additive native layer over emacs, bringing features like Deno's Javascript and Async I/O environment, Mozilla's Webrender, and other features in development. emacs-ng's approach is to utilize multiple new development approaches and tools to bring Emacs to the next level. It is maintained by a team that loves Emacs and everything it stands for - being totally introspectable, with a fully customizable and free development environment. We want Emacs to be a editor 40+ years from now that has the flexibility and design to keep up with progressive technology.
I guess it uses webrender instead of electron?
- Any emacs-ng specific packages?
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Emacs Webrender updates
Now I'm failing on this instead: https://github.com/emacs-ng/emacs-ng/issues/218
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RMS – EmacsConf Talk
Presumably because of emacs-ng [1], from the page " additive native layer over emacs, bringing features like Deno's Javascript and Async I/O environment, Mozilla's Webrender,".
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How do the neovim plugins for OrgMode and Magit compare with the real thing?
I know some projects along these lines are being attempted but they look to be years away from appreciable maturity, if ever.
- If anyone uses Atom (the text editor), it's be sunset on December 15, 2022
- MOMACS: FINALLY A BEGINNER FRIENDLY EMACS
- Why isn't Nyxt just an Emacs extension?
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How to use remacs with doom emacs?
The remacs project has turned into emacs-ng.
coffeescript
- Ask HN: Why don't browsers just build a non-JS interpreter?
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alternatives to the javascript ecosystem
That said, there are ways to embrace the JS ecosystem without actually using JavaScript. Many popular languages have transpilers that will convert code written in that particular language into something that will run natively in a web browser (in other words, JavaScript). Even TypeScript is a language that gets transpiled into JavaScript, so it's not that outrageous of a concept, it just gets more difficult to do the further you get away from languages that don't already look like JavaScript.
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Vanilla+PostCSS as an Alternative to SCSS
As a front-end web developer, do you still use CoffeeScript or jQuery? Unlikely, as TypeScript, ES/TC39 and Babel (and the retirement of Internet Explorer thanks to @codepo8 and his EDGE team) have helped to transform JavaScript into some kind of a modern programming language.
- Por que Elm é uma linguagem tão deliciosa?
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An Introduction for TypeScript
CoffeeScript
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Why React isn't dying
On the other hand, companies choose React because that's where all the developers are. If you want to build something that can be maintained years from now, you better not choose the next hype train that goes straight to nowhere (remember CoffeeScript ?). You want something battle tested that has stood the test of time, where you won't have trouble finding developers to scale once you need to. And nobody ever got fired for choosing React.
- We're breaking up with JavaScript front ends
- História sobre usar o JavaScript para programar JavaScript
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Civet: The CoffeeScript of TypeScript
http://coffeescript.org/#expressions
this comes from Lisp and makes a lot of things easier. Obviously this was not implemented in ES6 because it would break compatibility and there is also some problems with implicit returns that made the feature a bit weird
I wonder if a syntax like this for JS would work:
const eldest = if (24>41) { escape "Liz" } else { escape "Ike" }
with "escape" working like a mix of "break" and "return". But even then this is likely to cause incompatibilities
Coffeescript[1] was a flavour of JS syntax meant to look similar to Ruby syntax. You just compiled it back to JS. It was nice for working on Rails projects since it made everything feel more “cohesive”.
I assume this project is here for older Coffeescript[1] projects who want to start using typescript, and need access to interfaces/types that were present in old CS files.
What are some alternatives?
remacs - Rust :heart: Emacs
lightspeed.nvim - deprecated in favor of leap.nvim
emacs-cl - Common Lisp implemented in Emacs Lisp.
magit - It's Magit! A Git Porcelain inside Emacs.
tig - Text-mode interface for git
tide - Tide - TypeScript Interactive Development Environment for Emacs
Elm - Compiler for Elm, a functional language for reliable webapps.
calctex
far2l - Linux port of FAR v2
purescript - A strongly-typed language that compiles to JavaScript
servant - Main repository for the servant libraries — DSL for describing, serving, querying, mocking, documenting web applications and more!
imba - 🐤 The friendly full-stack language