nunjucks
sharp
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nunjucks | sharp | |
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41 | 97 | |
8,450 | 27,892 | |
0.5% | - | |
2.0 | 9.4 | |
2 months ago | 12 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
nunjucks
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How to Integrate Astro With ApostropheCMS pt. 1
In ApostropheCMS, templates are where code and content become web pages. Specifically, templates are written in normal HTML markup with special tags and are based on the Nunjucks template language. Thus, they are .html files placed in the /views subfolder of an ApostropheCMS module.
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How to Build an Ecommerce Website with ApostropheCMS
This starter Kit has been created by Corllete in partnership with Apostrophe. From a technical point of view, the ecommerce project is based on several UI components. Each of them relies entirely on Tailwind CSS for styling, with no additional CSS files. These components are organized in macros and fragments coming from the default server-side template engine Nunjucks.
- Why to use htmlx if we can continue using Django templates
- Django templates in the frontend
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Django Template Development
So there's Nunjucks, a frontend templating language inspired by jinja2, which itself is based on the Django template language. You could try that, and mock in data from JSON when required until you're ready to use real Django.
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Does anyone kind of miss simpler webpages?
The linked one is my Rails implementation, written for ViewComponent. The official version uses Nunjucks.
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What is the best framework for an existing node project that has html files?
The template engine is Nunjucks.
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Repeating Navigation, Header, and Footer in CSS and HTML?
Take a look on Nunjucks a templating language by Mozilla . You can use Gulp to start with it, check gulp-nunjucks-render.
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How to have multiple HTML pages have the same template layout?
Try out Nunjucks https://mozilla.github.io/nunjucks/ . It does exactly what you want.
- Nunjucks – A rich and powerful templating language for JavaScript
sharp
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Next.js and Bunny CDN: Complete Guide to Image Uploading with Server Actions
Last thing left is to use our new upload function in our server action. Since I like to upload images in single format and have some more control over them, I will additionally use sharp library. For file name, I'll generate some random string using nanoid:
- Sharp – fast image conversion in Node.js
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Optimizing Image Display with Blur Placeholder and Lazyload
blur is a technique to blur images while reducing the file size surprisingly. blur works by enlarging the pixels of the image, which reduces the details of the image, and the number of colors also decreases, thus saving storage space. Sharp is a popular image processing library in Node.js, and it supports the blur function. After going through the blur function, the image size at this point is only a few KB, which is reasonable for an image placeholder in the article.
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Organize the mess of your photo folders with Node
sharp
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Creating Chess Board SVGs, PNGs, and GIFs
For simplicity, I will be generating PNGs with JavaScript/Node and the Sharp image library. Any library that can convert between pixel arrays and image files will make the process quite straightforward.
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My Journey to Accelerate Load Times in Heavy Frontend
There is also a library that Next.js itself uses: sharp. It can be setup as Node.js service. I even played around a little: image-proxy-service
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Automated Image Compression: A Vite Plugin Using Sharp
Sharp Documentation: Link
- Using SVG to create simple sparkline charts
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JavaScript Gom Jabbar
ESLint does an amazing job in detecting floating promises. I've not had it miss one, ever. When adding this to a project, I've discovered multiple accidental bugs due to a missing "await" keyword--bugs that were extremely subtle and intermittent in many cases.
The only thing it can't do is determine that you actually did handle the promise later. Which is fine. It's a LINTING RULE, and false positives are the name of the game.
What's BAD is when you accidentally miss handling a promise at all. It's an invisible error without the linting rule.
Your other comments...don't even make sense. You're going to build a Lanczos filter by hand? Or you're only going to ... compile ImageMagick to WebAssembly?!, ... an implementation which is tremendously slower (nearly unusably so for large images) than that of Sharp:
https://www.npmjs.com/package/sharp
... which is simply an import away?
No, what you're doing is called "motivated reasoning." You've concluded that Deno is the best, and you're reinterpreting all of my complaints in convoluted ways to support your predetermined conclusion.
Standard fanboy behavior. Or troll behavior. I cite Poe's Law as why it's impossible to tell the difference.
- How does next/image work?
What are some alternatives?
EJS - Embedded JavaScript templates -- http://ejs.co
jimp - An image processing library written entirely in JavaScript for Node, with zero external or native dependencies.
handlebars.js - Minimal templating on steroids.
squoosh - Make images smaller using best-in-class codecs, right in the browser.
Jade - Pug – robust, elegant, feature rich template engine for Node.js
gm - GraphicsMagick for node
Liquid - Liquid markup language. Safe, customer facing template language for flexible web apps.
Next.js - The React Framework
mustache.js - Minimal templating with {{mustaches}} in JavaScript
pica - Resize image in browser with high quality and high speed
marko - A declarative, HTML-based language that makes building web apps fun
sveltekit-image-plugin - SvelteKit demo code for using vite-imagetools to add cached, responsive, Next-Gen images to a SvelteKit site with no cumulative layout shift.