git-conventional-commits
asdf
Our great sponsors
git-conventional-commits | asdf | |
---|---|---|
3 | 340 | |
303 | 20,448 | |
- | 2.8% | |
6.8 | 7.9 | |
28 days ago | 4 days ago | |
JavaScript | Shell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
git-conventional-commits
- Apollo dev posts backend code to Git to disprove Reddit’s claims of scrapping and inefficiency
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Maintain consistent styles for developers working across various editors
> https://direnv.net/ -- when you cd to a directory, do things like set variables.
Just use dotenv instead.
https://asdf-vm.com/ -- manage and use specific versions of software. Can work with direnv too!
May be useful in some cases, but adds a global dependency on asdf itself.
> https://pre-commit.com/ -- git hooks that I personally found easier to manage than Husky.
Git hooks are disturbing and slow down and/or break advanced git interactions.
> https://github.com/qoomon/git-conventional-commits -- enforce standard commit messages. Works with pre-commit!
Only if you want to be so pedantic about them. I find it mostly a waste of time to enforce commit message style.
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Automated Frontend Workflow
After installation, it will generate a lefthook.yml file which can be customized to perform a static code analysis before committing the code. For example, it can ensure that the git commit follows the git-conventional-commits, and use Prettier, ESLint, and Stylelint to check, format, and fix any file which will be committed and run any test related with Vitest depending on the filetype and run each in parallel.
asdf
- Show HN: I made a multiple runtime version manager that can be used on Windows
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Volta – Fastest Node version manager in Rust
Or if you need to manage more than just node, asdf has been around for over a decade and works great. You can use a .tool-versions to change runtimes for each project you have, in addition to managing your global runtime versions
https://asdf-vm.com/
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Pyenv – lets you easily switch between multiple versions of Python
Why not just use a tool like asdf (https://asdf-vm.com/) or mise (https://mise.jdx.dev/)?
These tools have the advantage of not being multi-taskers and can manage version for all your tools. You wouldn’t need pyenv and npm and rvm and…
We’ve even started committing the .mise.toml files for projects to our repos. That way, since we work on multiple projects that may need multiple versions of the same tool, it’s handled and documented.
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A Journey to Find an Ultimate Development Environment
The purpose of a version manager is to help you navigate or install any tools for development easily. Version Manager can be one tool for each dependency (e.g. NVM, g) or One tool for all dependencies (e.g. asdf, mise).
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How to Install Your Python Version on Ubuntu
(asdf)[https://asdf-vm.com/] fully supports Python and almost any other language. I've been using it for Ruby, Python, Elixir, and other languages for years and never looked back.
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Beginners Intro to Trunk Based Development
Secondly, our development environments must not drift, because then code may behave differently and a change could pass on our machine but fail in production. There are many tools for locking down environments, e.g nix, pkgx, asdf, containers, etc., and they all share the common goal of being able to lock down dependencies for an environment accurately and deterministically. And that needs to be enforced in our local workflow so we don't have to rely on CI environments for correctness. All developers must have environments that are effectively identical to what runs in CI (which itself should be representative of the production environment).
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Practical Guide to Trunk Based Development
There are many ways this can be done (e.g nix, pkgx, asdf, containers, etc.), and we won’t get into which specific tools to use, because we'll instead cover the essential essence of preventing environment drift:
- Criando seu ambiente com ASDF
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Kotlin version manager
I've really been enjoying asdf, which is a program that allows you to install specified versions of dev utilities as well as dynamically manage them via shims and .tool-versions files.
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How do i keep my "devops tool" always up to date in a smart way ?
I use the asdf version manager.
What are some alternatives?
Apollo-CustomApiCredentials - Tweak to use your own reddit API credentials in Apollo
SDKMan - The SDKMAN! Command Line Interface
better-commits - A CLI for creating better commits following the conventional commits specification
pyenv - Simple Python version management
desk - A lightweight workspace manager for the shell
rbenv - Manage your app's Ruby environment
not-autotools - A collection of awesome and self-documented m4 macros for GNU Autotools
nvm - Node Version Manager - POSIX-compliant bash script to manage multiple active node.js versions
detect-secrets - A developer-friendly secrets detection tool for CI and pre-commit hooks based on Yelp's detect-secrets
volta - Volta: JS Toolchains as Code. ⚡
git-scribe - ✍️ AI copilot for crafting insightful Git commit messages
HomeBrew - 🍺 The missing package manager for macOS (or Linux)