rack-mini-profiler
TinyMCE
Our great sponsors
rack-mini-profiler | TinyMCE | |
---|---|---|
21 | 41 | |
3,653 | 14,239 | |
0.7% | 1.3% | |
7.5 | 9.7 | |
2 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Ruby | TypeScript | |
MIT License | 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.
rack-mini-profiler
-
RoR Debugbar
Author of peek here. Honestly, I got burnt out. We stopped using this internally at GitHub which made it difficult to continue working on. Rails was going through its identity crisis with asset pipelines.
https://github.com/MiniProfiler/rack-mini-profiler gets you most of the way there and comes by default in the Gemfile for new Rails applications.
-
For RoR, see in production every method call, parameter and return value
This already exists to some degree: https://github.com/MiniProfiler/rack-mini-profiler
- benchmark sql queries in an action?
-
A Trick For Reading Flamegraphs
rack-mini-profiler will generate flamegraphs for Rails backend requests.
-
How to make Turbo frames load faster?
Have you tried using https://github.com/MiniProfiler/rack-mini-profiler to get a clear breakdown of where your server is spending it's time filling the requests? If rack-mini-profiler is too much for you to deal with right now, you can still get a good idea just using the https://github.com/ruby/benchmark gem and wrapping some of your requests in a benchmark.
-
Active_storage first time need help!
# Bundle edge Rails instead: gem "rails", github: "rails/rails", branch: "main" gem "rails", "~> 7.0.4" # The original asset pipeline for Rails [https://github.com/rails/sprockets-rails] gem "sprockets-rails" # Use sqlite3 as the database for Active Record gem "sqlite3", "~> 1.4" # Use the Puma web server [https://github.com/puma/puma] gem "puma", "~> 5.0" # Use JavaScript with ESM import maps [https://github.com/rails/importmap-rails] gem "importmap-rails" # Hotwire's SPA-like page accelerator [https://turbo.hotwired.dev] gem "turbo-rails" # Hotwire's modest JavaScript framework [https://stimulus.hotwired.dev] gem "stimulus-rails" # Build JSON APIs with ease [https://github.com/rails/jbuilder] gem "jbuilder" # Windows does not include zoneinfo files, so bundle the tzinfo-data gem gem "tzinfo-data", platforms: %i[ mingw mswin x64_mingw jruby ] # Reduces boot times through caching; required in config/boot.rb gem "bootsnap", require: false # Use Sass to process CSS # gem "sassc-rails" # Use Active Storage variants [https://guides.rubyonrails.org/active_storage_overview.html#transforming-images] # gem "image_processing", "~> 1.2" group :development, :test do # See https://guides.rubyonrails.org/debugging_rails_applications.html#debugging-with-the-debug-gem gem "debug", platforms: %i[ mri mingw x64_mingw ] end group :development do # Use console on exceptions pages [https://github.com/rails/web-console] gem "web-console" # Add speed badges [https://github.com/MiniProfiler/rack-mini-profiler] # gem "rack-mini-profiler" # Speed up commands on slow machines / big apps [https://github.com/rails/spring] # gem "spring" end group :test do # Use system testing [https://guides.rubyonrails.org/testing.html#system-testing] gem "capybara" gem "selenium-webdriver" gem "webdrivers" end
- What are the main suspects in a really slow Rails app?
-
My project: railstart app
rack-mini-profiler
-
Troubleshooting a RoR Application in Production
For a quick ad hoc peek at the performance of pages that you can request yourself, without having to go through the hoops of connecting to and committing to an external service, this gem can also be useful: https://github.com/MiniProfiler/rack-mini-profiler
-
Ok yโall. How can we get this kind of real-time memory profiling in Ruby? Does it already exist? Is anyone working on this?
It also has things like Rack Mini-Profiler which tie them together for Rack-based applications.
TinyMCE
-
TinyMCE (also) moving from MIT to GPL
TinyMCE provided a bit more information about this change in a GitHub discussion thread here: https://github.com/tinymce/tinymce/discussions/9496
As I posted there, this directly affects my open source project which is heavily tied to TinyMCE so I may end up forking, and reducing down to what my project needs to reduce maintenance scope & burden.
TinyMCE have been jumping around with their licensing. They were under LGPL, with some (what I believe were) misleading guidance into meeting the LGPL (they specified rules about keeping specific branding elements). They then jumped to MIT, and since moved some of the open plugins to their commercial offering. Now they're making this change.
-
A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev
TinyMCE - rich text editing API. Core features are free for unlimited usage.
-
Creating a Rich Text Editor with TinyMCE and React
Luckily, implementing a basic text editor in your React application is a fairly straightforward process. In this article I will show you how to implement a rich text editor using TinyMCE.
-
Laravel for Beginners #4 - Create a Dashboard
I'm using TinyMCE as the rich text editor, you can replace it with something else, or simply use a if you wish.
-
What is your goto WYSIWYG Editor?
Depends on your frontend's stack but the simplest to setup is probably TinyMCE. It's more limited than the other options in terms of customizability and extensibility though.
-
is there a library for this? those multifeature textareas where you can format the text and add attachments?
Yes, the most common being TinyMCE.
-
Alternative options to html editor?
TinyMCE
-
I am just flabbergasted and in complete stupor (point me to an MS FrontPage alternative)
Iโve heard good things about TinyMCE - located at https://www.tiny.cloud
-
free-for.dev
TinyMCE - rich text editing API. Core features free for unlimited usage.
What are some alternatives?
quill - Quill is a modern WYSIWYG editor built for compatibility and extensibility.
Draft.js - A React framework for building text editors.
CodeMirror - In-browser code editor (version 5, legacy)
ProseMirror - The ProseMirror WYSIWYM editor
trix - A rich text editor for everyday writing
Froala Editor - The next generation Javascript WYSIWYG HTML Editor.
slate - A completely customizable framework for building rich text editors. (Currently in beta.)
Summernote - Super simple WYSIWYG editor
ace - Ace (Ajax.org Cloud9 Editor)
TOAST UI Editor - ๐๐ Markdown WYSIWYG Editor. GFM Standard + Chart & UML Extensible.
react-quill - A Quill component for React.
Trumbowyg - A lightweight and amazing WYSIWYG JavaScript editor under 10kB