framelesshelper
httptoolkit
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framelesshelper | httptoolkit | |
---|---|---|
3 | 36 | |
826 | 2,424 | |
- | 4.2% | |
9.2 | 4.1 | |
4 months ago | 7 months ago | |
C++ | ||
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.
framelesshelper
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Ask HN: Side project of more that $2k monthly revenue what's your project?
Overall, I love Qt. I started studying QML 2 weeks ago to implement a Kanban view based on the underlined Markdown styled todo items in the text editor, and it's been really great so far. Property bindings, signals & slots, integration with C++, it all makes so much sense, much more than other declarative languages/frameworks (looking at you, React) imo.
Qt has been around for years, the documentation is extensive and the community is large and supportive. With QML I faced many problems, especially half-assed examples/documentation, Qt Creator's intellisense doesn't work well with QML sometimes, etc... But the tradeoff is worth it. I'm getting things done in a much faster pace with QML.
A problem that is common both in Qt and other cross-platform frameworks is that you end up writing some custom code for each operating system to make the look and feel more native. But I think it's getting better with awesome open-source projects taking care of beautiful native window decorations[1].
[1] https://github.com/wangwenx190/framelesshelper
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QStyleHelper - (QML and Widgets) Change QStyle/QPalette easily Fluent/Mica /w W11 and detect dark/light system
Love what I see here. This could possibly work perfectly together with FramelessHelper (github.com/wangwenx190/framelesshelper) which I use in my own application.
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I re-released my screenshot application, it is now open source
I evaluated first because I wanted to achieve a true frameless window styling which is way harder to do in widgets than in QML. I stumbled upon FramelessHelper (https://github.com/wangwenx190/framelesshelper) then (which is also available for QML) and I started in widgets. It fully depends on what you like more. I am still not a fan of writing JavaScript for desktop applications (except extensions) and since I've started with Qt I always used Widgets. I just feel more home on this side.
httptoolkit
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- HTTP Toolkit
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Reversing an Android app API
HTTP Toolkit, you will need to install one in your PC and another one in the emulator.
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Need an app that sniffs HTTP/HTTPS requests that are made by apps
Maybe not exactly what you're looking for, but if you could side-load on windows this app should work. https://httptoolkit.com/
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Using Elementor can I create repeating blocks like this?
use https://httptoolkit.com/ but it's getting a bit off-topic :)
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Ask HN: Side project of more that $2k monthly revenue what's your project?
I run HTTP Toolkit (https://httptoolkit.com) which passed $2k a couple of years back. No longer a side project, as it's made enough money for me to work on it full time for a fair while now, but it certainly started that way, and it's still a one-man show (plus many wonderful open-source contributors).
I suspect that'll be a common theme in answers here though: if you have a side project making $2k a month, in most of the world that's enough for you to go full-time and try to take it further. If you can make $2k/month on something working only part-time, you can definitely make a lot more if you focus on it.
On your questions: HTTP Toolkit is a desktop app (plus a mobile app and other components for integrations) but it's an Electron app that effectively functions as a SaaS (with a freemium subscription model) that just happens to have a component that runs on your computer. And actually getting to $2k wasn't overnight at all - it took a couple of years of slow steady slog. A few inflection points that made a notable difference (releasing rewriting support & Android support particularly) but mostly it was a matter of "just keep pushing", trusting the trajectory would keep going, and steadily grinding upwards. It's great where it is now, but it's hard work - a solo business is not for the faint of heart!
- An app to view what your phone is transmitting?
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why is my app not making any api requests after being deployed?
you can use tools like https://httptoolkit.com/ to check the requests
What are some alternatives?
qwindowkit - Cross-platform frameless window framework for Qt. Support Windows, macOS, Linux.
mitmproxy - An interactive TLS-capable intercepting HTTP proxy for penetration testers and software developers.
QStyleHelper - A Helper class for managing QStyle, QPalette, TitleBar Color on Windows and auto detect color scheme changes.
httpyac - Command Line Interface for *.http and *.rest files. Connect with http, gRPC, WebSocket and MQTT
pawxel - Lightweight screenshot tool for designers & developers
Proxyman - Modern. Native. Delightful Web Debugging Proxy for macOS, iOS, and Android ⚡️
clavier-plus - Clavier+ keyboard shortcuts manager for Windows
frida - Clone this repo to build Frida
Requestly - 🚀 Most Popular developer tool for frontend developers & QAs to debug web and mobile applications. Redirect URL (Switch Environments), Modify Headers, Mock APIs, Modify Response, Insert Scripts & Record web sessions and share it with your teammates for debugging.
grpc-browser - A web UI for browsing and executing gRPC operations in your .NET application
mockttp - Powerful friendly HTTP mock server & proxy library
frida-interception-and-unpinning - Frida scripts to directly MitM all HTTPS traffic from a target mobile application