hyperfiler
Browser
hyperfiler | Browser | |
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5 | 5 | |
48 | 2,417 | |
- | - | |
1.1 | 5.6 | |
almost 3 years ago | 12 days ago | |
TypeScript | Ruby | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | MIT License |
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hyperfiler
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We are drowning in churn and noise. I am fighting by switching this site to PDF
>HTML can easily be offline-able. Base64 your images or use SVG, put your CSS in the HTML page, remove all 2-way data interaction, basically reduce HTML to the same performance as PDF and allow it to be downloaded.
I built a tool for this exact purpose[0] since the HTML specification and modern browsers have a lot of nice features for creating and reading documents compared to PDF (reflow and responsive page scaling, accessibility, easily sharable, a lot of styling options that are easy to use, ability for the user to easily modify the document or change the style, integration with existing web technologies, etc.). In general I would rather read an HTML document than the PDF document since I like to modify the styling in various ways (dark theme extensions in the browser for example) which may be hard to do with a PDF, but its more of a personal preference. Some people will prefer that the document adjusts to the screen size of the device (many HTML pages), and others will prefer the exact same or similar rendering regardless of the screen size (PDF).
Either way, kind of a fun idea making a website using just PDFs. Not the most practical choice, but fun none-the-less.
[0] https://github.com/chowderman/hyperfiler
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HTTrack Website Copier – Free Software Offline Browser (GNU GPL)
There is also a similar program called HyperFiler[0]* that bundles web pages into single HTML files with a few more options such as a headless chromium transport option, built in minifiers, page sanitizers, and an option to grayscale the output pages, among other options. It's TypeScript based and has an programmatic API to customize the bundling process as well.
[0] https://github.com/chowderman/hyperfiler
* disclaimer: I created HyperFiler
- HyperFiler: Archive web pages by bundling them into single HTML files
- HyperFiler: Bundle web pages into hyper minified, single HTML files
Browser
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Responsiveness, ERB and Tailwind - looking for best practices
Very interesting, thank you! I didn't know this variant feature on erb files. It would only work after a request is made (and not if a window is resized for example) but it seems powerful. I'll try it for sure. I have used this browser gem in the past which helped me achieve something similar for specific cases, but this seems cleaner.
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My project: railstart app
browser
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railstart-niceadmin support more features
- [browser](https://rubygems.org/gems/browser)
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A gem to know the users devices
I’ve always used the browser gem to detect devices. It wirks really well, and it is still being maintained
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Has anyone here benchmarked device_detector VS browser gems
I have not benchmarked them but if you're porting old code to Browser beware that sometimes its predicate methods return true, sometimes false, and, sometimes: nil.