ordinary-puzzles-app
desktop
ordinary-puzzles-app | desktop | |
---|---|---|
5 | 214 | |
477 | 19,183 | |
- | 0.6% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
over 1 year ago | 8 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | 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.
ordinary-puzzles-app
- Is there any good example of real-world open-source application (neither libraries nor frameworks nor samples) written in Typescript?
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Running React Native everywhere: Yarn Workspaces monorepo
Last, because you're supporting multiple platforms in a single directory, it's easy to end up with confusing indirections and branches in platform-specific files. This may be just a "me" thing, but I find it hard to navigate around configuration files of projects that support multiple platforms. At first glance, it may look like all platforms use the same configuration files. But once you dig a bit deeper, you realize that each platform requires some ad-hoc tweaks to the configuration files (for Metro, Babel, Webpack, etc.). Want an example from a codebase I wrote? Check out Ordinary Puzzles, which is a mobile, web, and Electron app. It's not easy to understand what files are used by which platform (e.g., what platform build phase is using babel.config.js?)
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React Native monorepo supporting multiple platforms: Android, iOS, macOS, Windows, web, browser extension, electron
Can't say for sure. It's highly likely you'll need to make some changes to the metro bundle config when you update React-Native. But at least these changes should be less painful to deal with than having to mess with the native code (which you would do if you don't use nohoist). Personally, I prefer this approach to the known alternatives — which are not using a monorepo at all (which can get confusing as soon as you start supporting multiple platforms) or using a monorepo without nohoist. But it might be just a matter of preference 👍
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Building a desktop application using Electron and Create React App
I recently needed to wrap a React app generated with Create React App (CRA) with Electron (well, the app itself uses React Native for Web, but it doesn’t matter). My goal was to stay within the Create React App limits as much as possible (without ejecting). There’s no shortage of guides on how to do it online. Still, I couldn’t find one that fully follows the Electron security guidelines and provides a distribution setup using Electron-builder. So, here’s yet another tutorial on how to wrap an app built with Create React App in Electron — from the initial scaffolding up to the distribution workflow.
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Opensource RN apps (that are in production) - for inspiration
Ordinary Puzzles - Mobile and web puzzle game built with React-Native
desktop
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Launch HN: Diversion (YC S22) – Cloud-Native Git Alternative
Congrats on the launch! It's always exciting to see more competition in the version control space.
One question I have is whether you guys are better than:
https://desktop.github.com/
This seems to do the exact same thing, be free forever, and have a more mature GUI that is also easier to use than regular terminal git. In my firm, even with people who don't know how to code, they can use github desktop (since it babies you through the process of committing code.)
- Show HN: GitHub Desktop (GUI for Git operation)
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Ask HN: Can we do better than Git for version control?
- Product designers for open-source hardware. Various design files, SVG etc.
I’ve experimented with a “GUI only” git flow - just to see what is possible, so I could introduce the concept to others.
I found GitHub desktop app (https://desktop.github.com/)did a great job of visually showing git flows and functions, but for a non-tech/programmming person, the tool would be daunting.
Curiosity what your suggested tech stack would be - sans Terminal…
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The Scariest Thing Happened to Me Today--Now I'm Scared to Use Git Again
just use github desktop its an open source tool https://desktop.github.com/
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How to Deploy React App on gh-pages: Beginner's Guide
Download and install GitHub Desktop if you haven't already.
- Tudo que você precisa saber sobre Git
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🔗 Importance of Source Code Control: A Guide to Git
3️⃣ GitHub Desktop: A desktop application provided by GitHub that allows you to interact with Git repositories visually. It provides an easy way to clone repositories, commit changes, create branches, and push and pull changes. Website: https://desktop.github.com/
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The 10 tools I install on every new Mac I get
GitHub Desktop - much, much easier than installing and setting up Git yourself (free)
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A collection of useful Mac Apps
GitHub Desktop - Price: Free Git client for Mac that allows you to manage your GitHub repositories.
- Collaboration?
What are some alternatives?
react-native-picture-puzzle - ⚛️ 🧩 A picture puzzle component.
MK2360 - Convert mouse and keyboard input to xbox 360 controller output
concurrently - Run commands concurrently. Like `npm run watch-js & npm run watch-less` but better.
notion-app - Notion for Linux
super-auto-pets-db - This database website is an un-official guide and reference for the pets, food and stats from the game Super Auto Pets.
mackup - Keep your application settings in sync (OS X/Linux)
mobx-angular - The MobX connector for Angular.
git-lfs - Git extension for versioning large files
nx - Smart Monorepos · Fast CI
DropPoint - Make drag-and-drop easier using DropPoint. Drag content without having to open side-by-side windows
electronmon - 🖥 run, watch, and restart electron apps using magic
bitwarden - Bitwarden client applications (web, browser extension, desktop, and cli) [Moved to: https://github.com/bitwarden/clients]