lunchplanner
ghostedit
lunchplanner | ghostedit | |
---|---|---|
2 | 2 | |
0 | 11 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 10.0 | |
over 4 years ago | over 11 years ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
- | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
lunchplanner
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Ask HN: Publish old projects even though the source code embarrasses you by now?
https://github.com/egeozcan/lunchplanner
I was having so much fun back then with this one. Meteor.js was a blast of productivity and I apparently couldn't have cared less about code quality. This is not embarrassing, there's no perfect code and we make different trade-offs all the time, not to mention the skill difference between you and your past self.
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10 Years of Meteor: My experience with a pioneering JavaScript framework
Too long ago, I had written a lunch-planner as a joke to mock how much time we were losing by discussing what to eat at the office (and it even was used in a non-sarcastic way, to my own amazement), and I used meteor because it just worked.
2 years ago I said, I wonder if it works still, and I installed meteor, did an update and voila! It worked, just million times faster to build and much more responsive: https://github.com/egeozcan/lunchplanner/commit/91541a637531...
Even the built-in account system still works!!
Of course, it's not a serious project but I'm just very positively surprised how great of a DX Meteor has.
ghostedit
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Ask HN: Publish old projects even though the source code embarrasses you by now?
I have a 10 year old project on Github. I even have it on my resume. The code is nothing like what I would write today, but I think that's implied by it being 10 years old. And I'm personally quite proud of what I produced, even though I would do it differently now.
Project is a WSYIWYG editor (https://github.com/nicoburns/ghostedit) if anyone is interested. I wouldn't recommend anyone use it these days, but it could be interesting as a relatively small codebase to learn from if anyone is interested in how contenteditable in web browsers works.
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Text Rendering Hates You
Ah, that was a dark time for WYSIWYG editing on the web. I actually made my own back in that era [0] (well a little later, but when TinyMCE and CKEditor were still the goto solutions), and getting it to work cross-browser when IE6 was still a thing and had no dev tools was an absolute nightmare.
[0]: https://github.com/nicoburns/ghostedit
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