pxhist
biome
pxhist | biome | |
---|---|---|
1 | 25 | |
20 | 11,340 | |
- | 7.3% | |
5.2 | 9.9 | |
6 months ago | 2 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT 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.
pxhist
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I quit my job to work full time on my open source project [Atuin]
While I doubt I'd quit my day job for it, over the past couple of years I've been poking at my own database-backed shell history. The key requirements for me were that it be extremely fast and that it support syncing across multiple systems.
The former is easy(ish); the latter is trickier since I didn't want to provide a hosted service but there aren't easily usable APIs like s3 that are "bring your own wallet" that could be used. So I punted and made it directory based and compatible with Dropbox and similar shared storage.
Being able to quickly search history, including tricks like 'show me the last 50 commands I ran in this directory that contained `git`' has been quite useful for my own workflows, and performance is quite fine on my ~400k history across multiple machines starting around 2011. (pxhist is able to import your history file so you can maintain that continuity)
https://github.com/chipturner/pxhist
biome
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I switch from Eslint to Biome
{ "$schema": "https://biomejs.dev/schemas/1.7.0/schema.json", "organizeImports": { "enabled": true }, "files": { "ignore": ["package.json", "package-lock.json"] }, "linter": { "enabled": true, "rules": { "recommended": true, "style": { "noUnusedTemplateLiteral": "off" } } }, "formatter": { "indentStyle": "space", "indentWidth": 4, "lineWidth": 320 }, "javascript": { "formatter": { "semicolons": "asNeeded" } } }
- Fast, Declarative, Reproduble and Composable Developer Environments Using Nix
- Biome – fast JavaScript linter and formatter
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What is the most useful project you've ever worked on?
It is great to see that so many users are enthusiastic about Biome. It is really gratifying to work on a project that is appreciated and useful to the community.
[0] https://biomejs.dev/
- Biomejs.dev (previously Rome-tools by Meta)
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Build a Vite 5 backend integration with Flask
Once you build a simple Vite backend integration, try not to complicate Vite's configuration unless you absolutely must. Vite has become one of the most popular bundlers in the frontend space, but it wasn't the first and it certainly won't be the last. In my 7 years of building for the web, I've used Grunt, Gulp, Webpack, esbuild, and Parcel. Snowpack and Rome came-and-went before I ever had a chance to try them. Bun is vying for the spot of The New Hotness in bundling, Rome has been forked into Biome, and Vercel is building a Rust-based Webpack alternative.
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Why is Prettier rock solid?
> My only bad experience with prettier, besides the incredible slowness (orders of magnitude slower than ruff)
Ruff is based on the same foundations that Biome (https://biomejs.dev/). Although Biome doesn't support all languages that Prettier supports, you should give a try, it is fast.
- RFC: Biome Plugins
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BiomeJS 2024 Roadmap
I am also confused by this goal, I've started a discussion in the repo to get some clarity on intent and direction there: https://github.com/biomejs/biome/discussions/1642
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Tailwind CSS: Automatic Class Sorting with Prettier
Biome [0], a fast Prettier-compatible formatter, is currently working on adding class sorting [1]. We expect to ship the feature with the next release (on February). We are discussing which options to provide for the feature (mainly on the Discord of Biome).
[0] https://biomejs.dev/
What are some alternatives?
glicol - Graph-oriented live coding language and music/audio DSP library written in Rust
prettier - Prettier is an opinionated code formatter.
we
rspack - A fast Rust-based web bundler 🦀️
tools - Unified developer tools for JavaScript, TypeScript, and the web
prettier-plugin-sort-imports - A prettier plugin to sort imports in typescript and javascript files by the provided RegEx order.
jest - Delightful JavaScript Testing.
tsc-files - A tiny tool to run `tsc` on specific files without ignoring tsconfig.json
ava - Node.js test runner that lets you develop with confidence 🚀
stylelint - A mighty CSS linter that helps you avoid errors and enforce conventions.
dprint - Pluggable and configurable code formatting platform written in Rust.
eslint-config - Anthony's ESLint config preset