impulse
magrittr
impulse | magrittr | |
---|---|---|
24 | 10 | |
448 | 951 | |
0.9% | 0.0% | |
2.5 | 2.3 | |
5 months ago | about 1 year ago | |
TypeScript | R | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
impulse
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Show HN: I made CSS Pro, a re-imagined Devtools for web design
I you use Tailwind and React, you might like Impulse[1] (disclaimer: I made it and use it almost daily)
Not only does it provide means for visual editing (for Tailwind only), but it also saves all changes to your code.
Free and open source.
[1] https://impulse.dev/
- Launched Supertweak - a visual editor chrome extension for Tailwind websites
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How I launched Impulse.dev
I've been working exclusively on this project for half a year and... I don't really know where it's going. One of the primary goals from the beginning was to make a product I could use for most of my UI work. And oh my God, have I achieved that. Having used Impulse regularly for months (including designing Impulse itself and impulse.dev), I can't imagine going back.
- Show HN: Impulse – React UI editor that edits your code
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What is the best way to notify the React and Tailwind community about the new tool?
You can look at a few demo videos on the website https://impulse.dev/
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Impulse – Impossible Dev Tools for React and Tailwind
Trying to design some elements intuitively, just by setting classes and seeing how it looks; also prototyping. With Impulse, I can just cycle through all possible font-sizes / margins / paddings / shades of a color / you name it. I've designed the whole impulse.dev website with that approach and I don't wanna go back, it's just so much faster and fun even compared to writing code on two monitors with 10 years of experience. :D
- Show HN: Impulse – Impossible Dev Tools for React and Tailwind
magrittr
- This is not a pipe - René Magritte
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Six programming languages I’d like to see
R (yes, the statistics language) has exactly this.
You can literally extract the body of a function as a list of "call" objects (which are themselves just dressed-up lists of symbols), inject/delete/modify individual statements, and then re-cast your new list to a new function object.
I don't know why the original devs thought this was necessary or even desirable in a statistics package, but it turns out to be a lot of fun to program with. It has also made possible a wide variety of clever and elegant custom syntaxes, such as a pipe infix operator implemented as a 3rd-party library without any custom language extensions [0]. The pipe infix operator got so popular that it was eventually made part of the language core syntax in version 4.1 [1].
[0]: https://magrittr.tidyverse.org/
[1]: https://www.r-bloggers.com/2021/05/the-new-r-pipe/
- Hadley is pro- base pipe.
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Functional pipes in python like %>% from R's magrittr
In R (thanks to magrittr) you can now perform operations with a more functional piping syntax via %>%. This means that instead of coding this:
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Question about dot notation
Try reading the documentation for magrittr.
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When did WG21 decide this is what networking looks like?
Related note: the statistical programming language R has a library named magrittr to support the pipe operator.
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How can I find the data entry of the row after one found?
About the pipe (%>%) symbol, it's provided by the magrittr package. The package documentation details how to use the pipe operator.
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Best practice for chaining nested functions?
I was wondering what some good ways are to handle nested function calls without chaining them in long, ugly nested statements. I am looking for functionality similar to the pipe forward operator %>% in magrittr/R or |> in F#.
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I much prefer `data.action()` to `action(data). Is it an r/unpopularopinion?
You may like R: https://magrittr.tidyverse.org
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What's so "tidy" about tidyverse?
Agreed on everything else you said (especially the type safety stuff, it massively helps in production), but one correction: magrittr is absolutely in the tidyverse suite. It's not considered one of its "core" packages that it visibly tells you it loads, but magrittr is loaded when calling library(tidyverse) and development of the package is handled by the tidyverse team under their Github account: https://github.com/tidyverse/magrittr
What are some alternatives?
BetterJoy - Allows the Nintendo Switch Pro Controller, Joycons and SNES controller to be used with CEMU, Citra, Dolphin, Yuzu and as generic XInput
dplyr - dplyr: A grammar of data manipulation
TextToTalk - Chat TTS plugin for Dalamud. Has support for triggers/exclusions, several TTS providers, and more!
scenebuilder - Scene Builder is a visual, drag 'n' drop, layout tool for designing JavaFX application user interfaces.
Lazy - Lazily evaluated (late-binding) definition for Dyalog APL
kitten - A statically typed concatenative systems programming language.
lisperanto - Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for programming; Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for knowledge; Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for ideas;
power-fx-host-samples - Samples for hosting Power Fx engine.
ODS_OpenExposureData - Open data standards curated by Oasis.
libuv-tutorial - http://nikhilm.github.io/uvbook/
halo - An experimental graph-based meta programming language
ggplot2 - An implementation of the Grammar of Graphics in R