PyLD
flexboxgrid
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PyLD | flexboxgrid | |
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29 | 9 | |
580 | 9,364 | |
1.7% | - | |
5.2 | 0.0 | |
2 months ago | over 3 years ago | |
Python | HTML | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
PyLD
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Lucky like a 7 — Seven SymfonyCasts Courses to Master Symfony 7
"API Platform contains a PHP library (Core) to create fully featured hypermedia (or GraphQL) web APIs supporting industry-leading standards: JSON-LD with Hydra, OpenAPI, etc.
- I Wrote an Activitypub Server in OCaml: Lessons Learnt, Weekends Lost
- JSON for Linking Data
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I'm currently in the interview process for a Jr. Full Stack Developer position, and I was given this take-home test that has me on the verge of pulling my hair out.
3) Things I would need to refresh: JSON-LD (This is actually really useful): https://json-ld.org/
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The need for a more semantic web
Some documentation for you OP: - RDFa. - JSON-LD doesn't have to be in HTML. It's just a specification built on JSON to represent RDF data. Also, from experience, Turtle) is more popular - If you want to dig into what defining semantic vocabularies (ontologies) entails, read on RDF, RDFS, and OWL2.
- Making SEO better for blog posts with Structured Data
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Beginners Guide to Yoast SEO 2023
Schema markup can be added to a web page using the JSON-LD format, which is a structured data format that is supported by Yoast SEO.
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Getting Started with ActivityPub
It's a big long, so the response is at the bottom in Appendix A. The format is JSON for Linking Data, or JSON-LD.
flexboxgrid
- I'm currently in the interview process for a Jr. Full Stack Developer position, and I was given this take-home test that has me on the verge of pulling my hair out.
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Why is tailwind so hyped?
May you provide a specific scenario? A decade old 960gs provide a custom grid that could be easily tuned to any "proportion of the screen". Random super minimalistic http://flexboxgrid.com/ from the 10 seconds google search had a flex-basis param that could tune grid on the fly. Every other modern "flex css grid framework" has mediaqueries and basic components slapped on top. Barebones grid and flexbox provide tons of control without much effort for a simple drip-in positioning.
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Tailwind is now the most popular CSS framework in NPM
Here is a great CSS library that is just the column system. http://flexboxgrid.com/ It has the same naming as bootstrap. I personally just use flex and grid since it so powerful I have no need for a grid system. I just use grid template columns and then flex for pretty much everything else. Tis is why I love Tailwind CSS. It so much more powerful it has all the break points for you and then just lets you get to work and only generates the styles you actually use. On top of that you can easily create plugins and use the JIT styles where ever you need.
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Massive use of div containers in Yelp.com: is that really necessary?
if it helps this is my go-to flex grid system when I start a new project. I usually build the big blocks using the utility classes provided by flexboxgrid (which is percentage-based), and then go in each component and fine tune each one. I also extended it a little bit to cover some uses cases that I felt it missed
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How to use this bootstrap grid alternative?
Did you check out it's documentation? http://flexboxgrid.com/
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Personal preferences on using CSS libraries or writing your own
Okay, so basically I am just out looking at what other developers do to get some of my own inspiration on how to proceed with my project. As of now, I am using some CSS libraries like normalize.css and flexboxgrid just to get some sense of structure on my design. I have looked at tailwindcss as an alternative too instead of writing most of the CSS myself. I know there are both up/downsides to both. But looking for other peoples opinions on this matter. To be a bit more specific, what I am working with is a Laravel backend with VueJS in the front. I saw earlier today that one should get the design done first, before scratching the backend, so that is basically what I am trying to do right now.
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Have you taken the CSS Grid pill yet?
It does and I held off on learning CSS Grid even after I quit my job because flexbox does everything I need it to. I often used flexboxgrid (http://flexboxgrid.com/) to create my grids for my sites but since learning CSS Grid I have found that I can write a lot less HTML (fewer containers) and less CSS (fewer media queries) and layout a site faster and visually with properties like
What are some alternatives?
RDFLib plugin providing JSON-LD parsing and serialization - JSON-LD parser and serializer plugins for RDFLib
DataTables - Tables plug-in for jQuery
ultrajson - Ultra fast JSON decoder and encoder written in C with Python bindings
Packery - :bento: Gapless, draggable grid layouts
marshmallow - A lightweight library for converting complex objects to and from simple Python datatypes.
Isotope - :revolving_hearts: Filter & sort magical layouts
rdflib - RDFLib is a Python library for working with RDF, a simple yet powerful language for representing information.
Tabulator - Interactive Tables and Data Grids for JavaScript
jsons - 🐍 A Python lib for (de)serializing Python objects to/from JSON
Masonry - :love_hotel: Cascading grid layout plugin
serpy - ridiculously fast object serialization
floatThead - Fixed <thead>. Doesn't need any custom css/html. Does what position:sticky can't